
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A nurse in Louisiana receives an HIV diagnosis that doesn’t make sense.
No clear exposure. No obvious source. And eventually, investigators begin to suspect something far more disturbing.
In this episode of Outbreak After Dark, Heather and Kate explore the real case that brought forensic virology into the courtroom for the first time. Through genetic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis, scientists traced the relationships between viruses to help prosecutors build a criminal case against a physician accused of intentionally infecting his former partner.
How can a virus become evidence?
This is the story of the case that asked whether a virus could testify.
Topics include:
And because this is Outbreak After Dark, there’s also a menu:
All recipes and citations in the companion blog post at infectiousdose.com
Subscribe to the free weekly newsletter, Field Notes, to continue the conversation.
By Infectious Dose5
88 ratings
A nurse in Louisiana receives an HIV diagnosis that doesn’t make sense.
No clear exposure. No obvious source. And eventually, investigators begin to suspect something far more disturbing.
In this episode of Outbreak After Dark, Heather and Kate explore the real case that brought forensic virology into the courtroom for the first time. Through genetic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis, scientists traced the relationships between viruses to help prosecutors build a criminal case against a physician accused of intentionally infecting his former partner.
How can a virus become evidence?
This is the story of the case that asked whether a virus could testify.
Topics include:
And because this is Outbreak After Dark, there’s also a menu:
All recipes and citations in the companion blog post at infectiousdose.com
Subscribe to the free weekly newsletter, Field Notes, to continue the conversation.