By Jayme Blaschke
University News Service
February 12, 2008—Texas State University-San Marcos will locate its planned Forensic Research Facility on the 3,000-acre Freeman Ranch, a move announced by Provost Perry Moore today.
The Forensic Research Facility will be an open-air lab of approximately five acres surrounded by high security fencing. Within this lab, human bodies that have been donated to the facility will be allowed to decompose in a natural environment under the study of forensic anthropologists. The facility will be located in an area of
The facility, which will be an integral part of a graduate program in forensic anthropology at
“There is a real need for a laboratory such as this in our region,” said
Support for the facility has come from many law enforcement agencies in
During the first several years of operation, there will be no more than five or six bodies at the facility at any one time. The total decaying matter at the facility will be no greater than several dead deer or one large cow, therefore, the facility will not significantly increase the total decaying material on the Freeman Ranch or in the area of the ranch.
All bodies in the facility will be treated with respect and according to regular protocol for the study of human remains. A Hazard Analysis Critical Control System will be utilized to protect workers at the facility as well as individuals outside the facility. Netting and fencing will be used to keep intruders out of the facility, including scavengers and predators such as vultures and coyotes.