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Content provided by Scott Kuhlman and Chasity Owens, Scott Kuhlman, and Chasity Owens. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott Kuhlman and Chasity Owens, Scott Kuhlman, and Chasity Owens or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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S.2 Ep.23- Negative Corpus vs Process of Elimination; Two Alarms, Three Fires, One Security Guard

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Manage episode 520246661 series 3618920
Content provided by Scott Kuhlman and Chasity Owens, Scott Kuhlman, and Chasity Owens. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott Kuhlman and Chasity Owens, Scott Kuhlman, and Chasity Owens or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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On this episode, Scott and Chasity go deep into a real commercial structure fire that went all the way to jury trial—and nearly got labeled as “negative corpus” by the defense.

They walk through the fire from first alarm to conviction: a midnight manual pull station, sprinklers flowing on stacked cardboard, a lone security guard, multiple small fires at knee height, and no obvious ignition source in the debris. Scott breaks down, step-by-step, how he eliminated every plausible cause, built a scientific timeline using fire dynamics and experimental burns, and defended his incendiary determination in court.

Along the way they unpack:

  • The difference between negative corpus and proper process of elimination
  • How NFPA 921 evolved from 2008 through 2024 on this issue
  • Why documenting what you eliminated and how may be more important than your final cause
  • Using research like the Ignition Handbook and Kirk’s Fire Investigation to support your findings
  • Why separating origin & cause from interviews protects your objectivity
  • How attorneys will attack your work—and how to stay calm and defensible on the stand

They also touch on AI and NFPA’s new usage policy, talk respiratory protection with CleanSpace PAPR and ITL, share upcoming training opportunities, and introduce this episode’s vocab word: “Forensic”—timed perfectly with NFPA 921 (2024) formally calling fire investigation a forensic science discipline for the first time.

Stick around to the end for a tease of their upcoming NFPA 921 chapter-by-chapter game-show series, and don’t forget to smash that five-star rating—it’s free-99 and helps the podcast reach more investigators.

Thank you for listening!
If you enjoyed the episode, give us 5 stars, hit the follow button, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and anywhere you are listening in from.
Follow us on social media!
Instagram: @infocus_podcast
LinkedIn: INFOCUS podcast
Facebook: INFOCUS podcast
TikTok: @infocus_podcast

  continue reading

45 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 520246661 series 3618920
Content provided by Scott Kuhlman and Chasity Owens, Scott Kuhlman, and Chasity Owens. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott Kuhlman and Chasity Owens, Scott Kuhlman, and Chasity Owens or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

On this episode, Scott and Chasity go deep into a real commercial structure fire that went all the way to jury trial—and nearly got labeled as “negative corpus” by the defense.

They walk through the fire from first alarm to conviction: a midnight manual pull station, sprinklers flowing on stacked cardboard, a lone security guard, multiple small fires at knee height, and no obvious ignition source in the debris. Scott breaks down, step-by-step, how he eliminated every plausible cause, built a scientific timeline using fire dynamics and experimental burns, and defended his incendiary determination in court.

Along the way they unpack:

  • The difference between negative corpus and proper process of elimination
  • How NFPA 921 evolved from 2008 through 2024 on this issue
  • Why documenting what you eliminated and how may be more important than your final cause
  • Using research like the Ignition Handbook and Kirk’s Fire Investigation to support your findings
  • Why separating origin & cause from interviews protects your objectivity
  • How attorneys will attack your work—and how to stay calm and defensible on the stand

They also touch on AI and NFPA’s new usage policy, talk respiratory protection with CleanSpace PAPR and ITL, share upcoming training opportunities, and introduce this episode’s vocab word: “Forensic”—timed perfectly with NFPA 921 (2024) formally calling fire investigation a forensic science discipline for the first time.

Stick around to the end for a tease of their upcoming NFPA 921 chapter-by-chapter game-show series, and don’t forget to smash that five-star rating—it’s free-99 and helps the podcast reach more investigators.

Thank you for listening!
If you enjoyed the episode, give us 5 stars, hit the follow button, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and anywhere you are listening in from.
Follow us on social media!
Instagram: @infocus_podcast
LinkedIn: INFOCUS podcast
Facebook: INFOCUS podcast
TikTok: @infocus_podcast

  continue reading

45 episodes

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