Pierce L J, Strickland D J, Smith E S
Northwestern University Dental School, Chicago, Illinois 60611.
Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1990 Jun;11(2):171-7. doi: 10.1097/00000433-199006000-00014.
In 1870, Ansil L. Robinson was charged with the murder of his mistress, Mary Lunsford, in Mansfield, Ohio, U.S.A. Evidence against Robinson included an attempt to match his teeth to bite marks on the victim's arm. Robinson was acquitted after a 3-week trial despite the evidence linking his teeth to the wounds. This trial represents an early and perhaps the first attempt to admit bite-mark evidence in a court of law in the United States. The acquittal resulted in the obscurity that prevented this case from coming to the awareness of the forensic dental and legal communities sooner.
1870年,安西尔·L·罗宾逊被指控在美国俄亥俄州曼斯菲尔德谋杀了他的情妇玛丽·伦斯福德。指控罗宾逊的证据包括将他的牙齿与受害者手臂上的咬痕进行比对。尽管有证据表明他的牙齿与伤口有关,但经过为期三周的审判,罗宾逊被宣告无罪。这次审判是美国法庭上早期或许也是首次尝试采信咬痕证据。无罪判决导致此案默默无闻,使得法医牙科学界和法律界未能更早知晓这起案件。