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Can You Beat 'Bones' and Commit the Perfect Murder?

  • Ruthie Reyman
  • Aug 28, 2015
  • 3 min read

In Washington D.C Temperance “Bones” Brennan, a forensic anthropologist, is arriving home from working in Guatemala. She arrives to having to help Booth, a Special Agent of the FBI, on a case. She also gets the help from her crew, Angela Montenegro, an artist in forensic reconstruction, Jack Hodgins, forensic mineralogist and forensic chemist, and Zack Addy, forensic anthropologist. Angela does the reconstruction of the skull, puts a face and a name to the victim. Once they figure out the victim they can tell loved ones and find things out about the victim. Jack does the tracing of the evidence and particulates. That sometimes gives the place of death and DNA of the suspect. Zack helps Bones with examining the bones of the victim and sometimes helps Hodgins with examining evidence and particulates. On the first case Bones wasn’t technically working at the Jeffersonian Institute, Booth had permission to have her help with the investigation.

Without permission Bones went to one of the suspects to get his DNA, she got ahold of his gum which he threw away and technically it wasn’t his gum anymore because it was in the trash. But for some odd reason she got in trouble for it. I don’t understand why she did, but she did. She got in trouble by Booth’s boss and so did Booth, but she was Booth’s responsibility and so he did deserve to get into trouble. The case got handed to another agent because of what Bones did. Booth didn’t even know that Bones went and did that. I don’t get why Bones got in trouble for getting evidence. It wasn’t the suspect’s property anymore so there is nothing he could do about it, because it was in the trash it was anybodies property at that point. Bones had every right to get that gum that the suspect threw in the trash.

Bones gathers evidence from the dead, she relies on her ability to read clues left behind in the bones of the victims. When she analyzes the bones she looks deep into them and finds their secrets that nobody else can find until she points them out. Which I think is very interesting because all she does is look at them with a very high tech magnifying glass and sees the littlest things that are actually really big. Booth on the other hand gets his evidence from the living, witnesses, and suspects. He asks the victim’s family and friends questions about the victim and the victim’s life. I don’t understand why Booth doesn’t interrogate the family and friends. Because it could also be a family member or a friend it doesn’t always have to be someone that isn’t a family or a friend. I think that Booth should take it as everybody that has ever communicated with the victim, as a suspect.

Bones is a very interesting show. In the show they are investigating homicides that have happened recently or in the past that they are just now discovering. Booth has Brennan and her crew help him solve the cases, by identifying the body and identifying any particulates. Booth and Brennan have a hard time starting out working together, because Brennan doesn’t let Booth know what she is doing when he needs to know so he can be there to protect her.


 
 
 

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Created by: Ruthie Reyman

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