Main content

Foodunnit?

The role of food in criminal investigations.

A forensic look at food and its crime-solving powers.

We start with one of the most challenging cases London’s murder squad has ever faced. The BBC’s Emily Thomas meets the Metropolitan Police’s former head of homicide investigations, Andy Baker, by the banks of the Thames, to hear how a murder victim’s stomach contents can help detectives.

We meet some hungry criminals – a bank robber with a burger and a thief with his hand in the biscuit tin. Former crime scene investigator Dennis Gentles, from Abertay University in Dundee, Scotland, explains new research to identify fingerprints on food, and David Foran, director of Michigan State University’s forensic science programme, tells us how a half-finished meal left at a crime scene can be a rich source of DNA. But why would a criminal stop for a snack? We speak to criminologist Richard Wright from Georgia State University.

Plus, we find out how food industry technology is being used by detectives. Sheriff Todd Bonner from Wasatch County in Utah tells us how a case that haunted him for 18 years was eventually solved by a vacuum designed for use on food. Finally, the Food Chain’s own Simon Tulett, explores the mystery of the disappearing sausage stew.

Please note - a couple of the cases we describe are of a graphic nature and might be upsetting for some, particularly younger listeners.

(Photo: Apple and outstretched hand. Credit: Getty Creative).

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Mon 15 May 201703:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 11 May 201702:32GMT
  • Thu 11 May 201703:32GMT
  • Thu 11 May 201704:32GMT
  • Thu 11 May 201706:32GMT
  • Thu 11 May 201710:32GMT
  • Thu 11 May 201721:32GMT
  • Sat 13 May 201707:32GMT
  • Sun 14 May 201700:32GMT
  • Sun 14 May 201707:32GMT
  • Mon 15 May 201703:32GMT

Food Chain highlights

Food Chain highlights

Tea, coffee, spices, chillies ... snack on a selection of programme highlights

Podcast