Photography: Darrell Eager; Retouching: Raygun Studio
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CIRCUITS SIZZLED?: Forensic engineer Andrew Paris investigates.
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Forensic engineer. If the job title conjures up images
of a dead body flash-frozen with the rigor of
electrocution, or high-res digital cameras snapping
photos at the scene of a suspicious fire, or a toaster’s
charred wiring strung out on a slab like body parts
during an autopsy, that’s absolutely right. So says
26‑year-old , who often explains what he does to
friends and family by referencing a pop culture
touchstone. “I just ask, ‘Have you seen the show
“CSI”?’ ” Paris says.
To be sure, forensic engineering isn’t quite as
glamorous as the television show makes crime scene
investigation out to be. But for someone who loves
solving technically challenging puzzles, it’s just as
compelling. Picking apart burnt lighting ballasts from a
house fire, photographing a scene, questioning
witnesses, writing reports, and preparing cases for
trial, a forensic engineer wears many hats. Says Paris,
“There’s something new coming at you every day.”
Paris works for Anderson Engineering of New Prague
Inc., located about 50 kilometers south of Minneapolis.
The firm’s offices are not in a sterile office park but
on a buffalo farm, which is the property of brother and
sister Erik and Beth Anderson, who own the company along
with their father, Ordean Anderson.
On a recent morning, Paris explained his craft. Nearby
hung a whiteboard covered with equations and circuit
diagrams, while electrical parts were strewn across the
table in front of him—the guts of a box fan of the same
make and model suspected of causing a barn fire that,
sadly, incinerated several high-priced stud horses.
Paris had purchased the old fan on eBay so that he could
take it apart and see where and how the motor and wiring
might have failed and violently discharged enough energy
to spark the fire. He is coy about his conclusions
because the case is ongoing.
Though hard science can certainly help solve a case,
forensic engineering is also an art learned through
experience. For his first two years on the job, Paris,
who graduated in 2002 from North Dakota State
University, in Fargo, with a B.S. in electrical
engineering, was essentially an apprentice. From Erik,
Beth, and Ordean, a former electrical engineering
professor at Paris’s alma mater, he learned things that
most engineering classes never cover, such as how to
read burn patterns on walls, floors, and ceilings to
determine the origin and progression of a fire.
“You’re basically a neophyte for two years until you
can start doing things on your own,” says Paris. “It
takes that long to go to enough scenes to understand the
process and the legal issues.” Originally attracted to
engineering because the rigor of the discipline lends
itself to solving complex problems, Paris fell into
forensic engineering after graduating from college. He
answered an ad on the Monster.com Web site and soon
found himself interviewing with the Andersons. “I had no
idea that this field even existed,” recalls Paris.
“I don’t think many people do.”
While part of Paris’s job includes reading through
dog-eared copies of old electrical code and tinkering
with parts to see how they might catastrophically fail,
he also spends a lot of time at accident scenes and in
laboratories. At a recent inspection of debris from a
house fire, Paris met with another forensic engineer at
the offices of EFI Global, in Eden Prairie, Minn. Even
though the cause of the fire had yet to be determined,
rags soaked in wood stain and left in a plastic garbage
can—a tried-and-true trigger for spontaneous
combustion—seemed the likely culprits. Paris was there
to rule out the new electrical outlets that his client,
an electrician, had installed.
Paris and Gary Hong, his counterpart representing the
homeowner’s insurance company, began by ripping open
bags containing a melted drill, a burned-out tile saw,
and other electric tools found in the garage where the
fire started. As the room filled with the acrid aroma of
moldy, burnt plastic, Paris and Hong poked and prodded
pieces of evidence, taking photos and detailed notes.
They deferred a full-blown inspection until a third
investigator could join them.
1085°C
melting point of copper
But even this limited examination provided valuable
clues. Later, over coffee, Paris says that the one
outlet he looked at was unlikely to have started the
blaze. His proof? First and most obvious: no plug in the
socket—if there had been, the outlet would have been
recovered with the plug still connected. But what if
someone had removed the plug after the fire? No way,
Paris explains. The metal plates that hold the prongs of
a plug in the outlet were still pressed together. If a
fire had started with a plug in place, the plates would
have remained spread apart. And the clincher: the plug
prongs on the saw and drill were charred. Had they been
left in a socket, they would have been protected from
the fire and would appear fairly clean.
While this inquest looks like it will wrap up quickly,
Paris has been called in on a few investigations that
he’ll probably never forget. Take the strange case of
the dastardly dough machine. A maintenance worker in a
frozen pizza factory was told by his boss to clean the
machine’s rollers—while it was running. The worker’s
glove got caught in a roller, and his arm was dragged in
up to the bicep, crushing it to a uniform thickness of
5 centimeters.
Though the unfortunate worker lost his mangled arm, he
won a tidy settlement from his employer and the
machine’s manufacturer, thanks to some sleuthing by
Paris and the Andersons. They interviewed engineers from
the machine’s manufacturer and pizza factory personnel
and pored over depositions and documents relating to the
design and operation of the errant apparatus.
Eventually, the team discovered that the manufacturer
had acceded to demands from the factory owner to disable
magnetic locks that were supposed to shut down the
machine to allow for safe cleaning; what’s more, control
software that would have automatically cut power in the
event of an accident had been deactivated.
“It’s satisfying to know that you’ve helped people who
have been wronged and that you’re part of ensuring that
products are safe,” says Paris with pride. “If nobody
did anything about it, what incentive would there be to
make a safer product?”