MurderCon
Actually, according to Writers' Police Academy (www.writerspoliceacademy.com) founder and former detective Lee Lofland, the writers who attend the event known colloquially as "MurderCon" want to know as much as they can learn about police work and forensics.
And not all of the writers attending this year's four-day conference were people just starting out in their publishing careers. One of the most notable attendees was Charlaine Harris, author of the books that inspired the TV series "True Blood" and "Midnight, Texas." Harris has the kind of resume that would allow her to contact just about any law enforcement agency in the United States and get a response to her questions, but she prefers coming to MurderCon to learn the details that can give her law enforcement scenes credibility. "I would be embarrassed to interrupt real officers while they are working," she says.
Lofland and his Writers' Police Academy team have been producing the event for 11 years, moving from Ohio, to Wisconsin, to North Carolina, and to a variety of venues. Some years it has been held at actual police academies. Along the way writers attending MurderCon have had the opportunity to get hands-on experience in a wide variety of police procedures and techniques, including firearms training, use-of-force simulator training, force-on-force tactical scenarios, bomb squad procedures, and even how to perform the PIT maneuver. Classes have also trained the authors in police procedures and culture.
This year by request of the attendees, MurderCon focused on crime scene investigation techniques, procedures, and technology. Lofland says he has been working with Sirchie (www.sirchie.com) for eight years and the company, one of the global leaders in production of investigative and forensic products and a provider of instruction for law enforcement, was a natural fit.