Dr. Angie Ambers is an internationally recognized DNA expert and Assistant Director of the Henry C. Lee Institute of Forensic Science, a world-class institute that specializes in interdisciplinary research, training, testing, casework consulting, and education in forensic science. Dr. Ambers also holds an Associate Professor (Forensic DNA) appointment in the Henry C. Lee College of Criminal Justice and Forensic Sciences at the University of New Haven, teaching forensic biology and DNA analysis methods, in addition to specialty courses on advanced DNA topics. She has a Ph.D. in molecular biology (with emphasis in forensic genetics and human identification) as well as master’s degrees both in forensic genetics and in criminology. She worked as a forensic geneticist for the University of North Texas (UNT) Center for Human Identification for 8 years and, prior to pursing her doctorate, was lead DNA analyst and lab manager of UNT's DNA Sequencing Core Facility. Her doctoral research involved an investigation of methods (e.g., whole genome amplification, DNA repair) for improving autosomal and Y-STR typing of degraded and low copy number (LCN) DNA from human skeletal remains and environmentally damaged biological materials. Her master’s thesis research included development and optimization of a DNA-based multiplex screening tool for genetics-based separation of fragmented and commingled skeletal remains in mass graves. Dr. Ambers specializes in characterization and identification of contemporary, historical, and archaeological human skeletal remains. Her casework has involved DNA testing of an American Civil War guerrilla scout; several Finnish World War II soldiers; unidentified late-19th century skeletal remains discovered by a construction crew in Deadwood, South Dakota; unidentified skeletal remains of Special Operations soldiers killed during the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus; skeletal remains exhumed from Prague Castle in the Czech Republic; skeletal remains of soldiers from the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763); bone samples purported to belong to a member of Jesse James gang (killed during a bank robbery in 1876); and the exhumed remains of the wife of a Yale medical school professor. She co-presented a workshop on “Advanced Methods for DNA-based Analysis of Skeletal Remains at the 26th International Symposium on Human Identification (ISHI), and has been an invited speaker at an international bone workshop/conference in Prague, Czech Republic. In 2017, she traveled twice to India to train scientists from various Indian states and the Maldives Police Service on the processing of bone samples in forensic DNA casework. During her visit to India, she performed autosomal STR analysis on human skeletal remains discovered along a hiking route in the Himalayas (in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh) to assist local officials in the investigation of a missing persons case. Additionally, she performed DNA analysis on a female homicide victim recovered from a clandestine grave in New Delhi. Dr. Ambers’ casework and research has been published in various peer-reviewed journals, including Forensic Science International: Genetics (FSI:Genetics), Forensic Science International, International Journal of Legal Medicine, Legal Medicine, BMC Genomics, the Croatian Medical Journal, The Journal of Heredity, and Journal of Biological and Clinical Anthropology (Anthropologischer Anzeiger). Her work has received press in numerous local and national newspapers (including The Washington Times, NBC News, Criminal Legal News, The Root) and has been featured on several podcasts (Truth and Justice, Crime Waves). Among her most recent casework (a collaboration with the Texas Historical Commission) includes DNA analyses of human skeletal remains associated with the French explorer La Salle’s last expedition. This case involved massively parallel sequencing (MPS) of DNA from two adult male skeletons recovered from the La Belle shipwreck, skeletal remains recovered from a mass grave at Fort St. Louis, and the putative remains of Sieur de Marle. Additionally, Dr. Ambers performed DNA extractions and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequencing on numerous sets of skeletal remains associated with Spanish royalty and the House of Aragon (recovered from tombs within the Royal Pantheon of San Juan de la Peña archaeological site in Spain). She is currently working on the putative remains of William Townsend Washington, the nephew of former U.S. President George Washington. In addition to skeletal remains cases and research, Dr. Ambers collaborated with the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) and the Forensic Technology Center of Excellence (FTCoE) to develop and disseminate a formal report on the use of Familial DNA Searching (FDS) in casework. She is an active cold case consultant, an advocate of post-conviction DNA testing, and an educator/advisor on DNA testing or re-testing of old, degraded, or challenging evidentiary samples. Dr. Ambers also was the 2017-2018 Project Lead on a U.S. State Department grant to combat human trafficking in Central America through the application of forensics. As part of the program objectives, she traveled to three Northern Triangle countries (Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras) to perform gap assessments of government laboratories and train personnel in forensic DNA analysis, with the goal of promoting quality casework methods based on ISO 17025 standards. As Project Lead, she helped train forensic DNA scientists at the Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Forenses de Guatemala (INACIF, the National Institute of Forensic Sciences of Guatemala) in Guatemala City, Guatemala; the Instituto de Medicina Legal (Institute of Legal Medicine) in San Salvador, El Salvador; and the Instituto de Medicina Forenses: Centro de Medicina Legal y Ciencias Forenses (the Institute of Forensic Medicine: Center of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences) in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. In addition to providing both lecture and