I-Team: Its nothing like the show, inside the real CSI Las Vegas – KLAS – 8 News Now

Posted: October 7, 2021 at 3:32 pm

'CSI: Vegas' premieres 20 years after original CBS hit

by: David Charns

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) In the fictional world of CSI: Vegas, Maxine Roby leads a team of crime scene investigators in her high-tech lab off the Las Vegas Strip. In real life, the job is anything but glamorous.

I really wish we could solve crime in 60 minutes, Kimberly Murga, Las Vegas Metropolitan polices director of laboratory services, said.

Two women split Robys fictional job. Murgas forensics laboratory and Kristin Grammas Crime Scene Investigations unit work together to solve some of the valleys worst crimes.

While the CSI world shows the crime scene analysts and forensic scientists working side-by-side, in reality, they work in two separate buildings in a nondescript office park near South Jones Boulevard and the 215.

Its nothing like the show, Grammas, the director of Metros CSI unit, said. Theres is all fancy and they have glass offices and cool lighting. Ours is fluorescent lightbulbs so its not as cool, but we still have a lot of the cool technologies that they have on the show.

What we do is exciting behind the scenes, but it takes time and its not resolved quickly, Murga said.

During real Metro police work, crime scene analysts will be dispatched to a scene a felony event such as a murder, assault or robbery. Teams will catalog what they find fingerprints, blood, hair, anything with a potential clue and then send it to the forensics lab for processing.

Characters on the CSI shows often do all those jobs; some even do it while directing the department.

Those responsibilities are not typically shared, but for all intents and purposes on the show, such as CSI, they have to consolidate that so they can get the crime evaluated and solved within their 60-minute limit, Murga said.

That is not reality, Grammas said. Both women added as directors their roles are now strictly administrative. Unlike, the fictional Roby, neither are actually going out to a scene or testing evidence.

Grammas team collects the pieces of the puzzle that Murgas scientists hope to then unlock.

In the decades since the original CSI premiered in 2000, a lot has changed.

One of the biggest changes is in DNA technology, Murga said. Testing a blood sample the size of a quarter used to take two months, she said. In 2021, her team can test an area the size of a pinhead and get results in a matter of hours.

In addition, the advent of DNA and print databases has added whole new ways to arrest criminals.

Hopefully us helping solve it for them or figure out what helps them helps them with the closure, so thats why, Grammas said.

Seeing not only that those crimes are solved, but also that justice is served, Murga said.

The I-Teams George Knapp will appear in several CSI: Vegas episodes this fall.

CSI: Vegas airs Wednesdays at 10 p.m. on 8 News Now.

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I-Team: Its nothing like the show, inside the real CSI Las Vegas - KLAS - 8 News Now

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