CONTACT:
School of Adult and Graduate Education
610-740-3770
sage@cedarcrest.edu
Traditional Admissions
800-360-1222
610-740-3780
admissions@cedarcrest.edu
Lawrence A. Quarino, Ph.D.
Director/Professor, Forensic Science
laquarin@cedarcrest.edu
610-437-4471 ext. 3567
![]() Lawrence QuarinoProfessor/Director of Forensic Science Program |
B.S., Saint Peter's College
M.S., John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Ph.D., Criminal Justice, Forensic Science Track, City University of New York
Trace Evidence and Microscopy
Advanced Microscopy
Legal, Ethical, and Administrative Issues in Forensic Science
Fellow, American Academy of Forensic Science; Director, Forensic Specialties Accreditation Board, Tri-Editor-In-Chief, Journal of Forensic Science Education, Member, Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientists
Awards: Lifetime Achievement Award, Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientists, 2019; Mary Cowan Outstanding Service Award, American Academy of Forensic Sciences, 2010Lawrence Quarino is a professor of forensic science and director of the forensic science program, a role he has served in since 2002. His professional experience includes 4 years as a forensic scientist with the New Jersey State Police and 11 years as a supervising forensic scientist with the Office of Chief Medical Examiner in New York City. In New York City, he supervised forensic scientists who analyzed physical evidence in over 1,000 sexual assault or homicide cases. He worked on the World Trade Center Identification Project as a molecular biology consultant and has provided expert courtroom testimony in more than 100 cases. He has authored or coauthored more than 30 publications in peer and editorial reviewed journals and has served as the Chair of the Criminalistics Section of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, President of the Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientist, and Chair of the Forensic Science Educational Programs Accreditation Commission. Additionally, he has served as a manuscript reviewer for nearly 20 different journals and currently serves as a tri-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Forensic Science Education. He also currently serves on the Forensic Specialties Accreditation Board.
Lambert, C.M., Clark B., Schwartz T., Brettell T., Quarino L. Evaluation of the Evidentiary Value of Cable Ties, Journal of the American Society of Trace Evidence Examiners, In Press, 2020.
Rogers M., Lal-Paterson A., Kishbaugh J., Quarino L., Use of RGB Values in the Periodic Acid-Schiff Color Test to Determine the Presence of Vaginal Fluid, Science and Justice, In Press, 2020 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scijus.2020.06.004.
![]() Thomas A. BrettellChairperson of Chemical and Physical Sciences |
B.S. in Chemistry, Drew University
M.S. in Chemistry, Lehigh University
Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry, Villanova University
Analytical Chemistry
Forensic Chemistry
Separations Chemistry
Analytical Spectroscopy
Technical Information
Forensic Science Administration
Thesis Prospectus
Quality Assurance, Control & Management
Forensic Chemistry & Toxicology Laboratory
Instrumental Analysis,
Memberships: American Chemical Society (ACS), American Academy of Forensic Science (AAFS), American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors (ASCLD), Council of Forensic Science Educators (COFSE), Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientists (NEAFS), New Jersey Association of Forensic Scientists (NJAFS), Middle Atlantic Association of Forensic Scientists (MAAFS), Eastern Analytical Symposium, Inc. (EAS), Society of Forensic Toxicologists (SOFT).
Awards: AAFS Criminalistics Section Meritorious Service Award. Chromatography Forum of the Delaware Valley Award
Dr. Brettell is Chair of the Chemical & Physical Sciences Department of Cedar Crest College. He previously served for 31 years in the New Jersey State Police Office of Forensic Sciences, where, as Director, he oversaw the operation of the State's regional forensic laboratory system. Dr. Brettell has testified in municipal and superior courts in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and was the State of New Jersey’s lead expert on the scientific reliability of the breath testing instrument in two Frye hearings before the New Jersey State Supreme Court.
Dr. Brettell has been active in leadership positions in national and international forensic science professional organizations, most recently serving on the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Seized Drug Subcommittee of the Organization of Scientific Committees (OSAC) to develop federal standards and guidelines to improve Forensic Science. He presently serves as Commissioner Academician on the Forensic Education Programs Accreditation Commission. He is a certified Diplomate of the American Board of Criminalistics and a Fellow with the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS).
J. Anasti and T.A. Brettell, "Hydrophilic-Interaction Liquid Chromatography", Encyclopedia of Analytical Chemistry, Eds. R.A. Meyers, John Wiley, Chichester. 2015.
![]() Aisling DoyleLab Manager |
![]() Janine KishbaughInstructor of Forensic Science |
B.S. in Genetic Engineering, Cedar Crest College
M.S. in Forensic Science, Cedar Crest College
Forensic Molecular Biology
Professional Communication
Fellow, American Academy of Forensic Sciences
Member, Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientists
Two sexual assault-based research projects were published and then sited research investigated with funding through the Office on Violence Against Women, US Department of Justice. (Lonsway, K. A., Archambault, J., O’Donnell, P., Ware, L. (2016). Role of DNA Evidence in Sexual Assault Investigations. Part 1: The ABC’s of DNA Evidence. End Violence Against Women International.)
Sween, K., Quarino, L., Kishbaugh, J., Detection of Male DNA in the Vaginal Cavity Following Digital Penetration Using Y-Chromosome Short Tandem Repeats. J Forensic Nurs 2015; 11(1): 33-40.
Quarino, L and Kishbaugh, J., The utility of Y-STR profiling in four-, six-, and eight-day postcoital vaginal swabs. Med Sci Law 2012; 52: 81-88.
![]() Carol RitterSenior Instructor |
B.S., Biochemistry, University of Scranton
M.S., Biochemistry, University of Scranton
Crime Scene Reconstruction and Pattern Analysis (undergraduate)
Advanced Forensic Pattern Analysis (graduate)
Advanced Crime Scene Reconstruction (graduate)
Recent Advances in Forensic Biology (graduate)
Thesis Prospectus (graduate)
Research (undergraduate and graduate)
![]() Marianne Staretz Associate Professor |
Ph.D. in Bioorganic Chemistry, State University of New York at Binghamton
B.S. in Biochemistry, University of Scranton
Biochemistry I and II
Biochemistry Laboratory I and II
Toxicology
Survey of Organic Chemistry
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Marianne Staretz, Ph.D., did her doctoral research on the mechanism of the colchicine-tubulin interaction in relation to cancer. A multi-disciplinary approach combining the techniques of organic synthesis, medicinal chemistry and biochemistry was used. She went on to do postdoctoral research at the American Health Foundation, a non-profit research institution dedicated to disease prevention. Her research focused on the effects of isothiocyanates, dietary inhibitors of carcinogenesis, on the metabolism of and formation of DNA adducts by carcinogenic tobacco-specific nitrosamines and benzo(a)pyrene. Staretz has continued some of the cancer prevention research at Cedar Crest College by examining the cancer prevention mechanism of organoselenium agents. She has also expanded some of the toxicology experience gained at the American Health Foundation into the area of forensic toxicology and has several ongoing research projects in this area.
Member-American Chemical Society (ACS), Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientists (NEAFS), and American Academy of Forensic Science (AAFS)
"I don't think students realize as they are progressing through their years of college how valuable the experience actually is. The goal is not just to get that degree. You will actually use what you are learning here—so work hard to learn as much as you can. The greater the effort you put into it, the greater the rewards will be."
"I have always wanted to teach at a small liberal arts college where teaching is the focus of the college. Cedar Crest College certainly fits in that category. On my first visit to Cedar Crest, I became aware of a faculty dedicated to teaching and knew that I wanted to be a part of that faculty. I am surrounded by some very talented teachers and scholars and it is a privilege to be a part of that community. Being part of the family of women scientists, it is also a pleasure to be involved in the education of future women scientists and contribute to the growth of this family."
![]() Gwyn L. FadlerAdministrative Assistant |