Ex-colleague Named Head of Monroe County Crime Lab

I used to work with Janet back when she was just a mem­ber of the tox­i­col­ogy unit at the Phoenix Police Crime Lab. She was always a very friendly, inspir­ing, eth­i­cal sci­en­tist. Best of luck to her in New York.

A vet­eran foren­sic sci­en­tist from California, Janet Anderson-Seaquist, has been named admin­is­tra­tor of the Monroe County Public Safety Laboratory.

Anderson-Seaquist, who pre­vi­ously headed the crime lab for the Ventura County, California sheriff’s depart­ment, was lured to Monroe County in part by the state-of-the-art lab now being built in down­town Rochester.

“It was an incred­i­ble oppor­tu­nity,” Anderson-Seaquist said as she was intro­duced at a news con­fer­ence today. Anderson-Seaquist, who started work here Jan. 4, said she also has found the crime-lab staff a tal­ented one. She noted their abil­ity to work in the cur­rent antiqued lab in the county Public Safety Building.

“Sometimes I’m sur­prised they can still smile,” she said.

County Executive Maggie Brooks said Anderson-Seaquist was the clear favorite after a nation­wide search. “She’s going to take it (the lab) into a new decade and take it to a new level,” Brooks said.

The $30 mil­lion new facil­ity, now under con­struc­tion at the south­east cor­ner of Broad Street and South Plymouth Avenue, is sched­uled to open in the early sum­mer of 2011.

Anderson-Seaquist, 47, headed a lab in Ventura County that is roughly the size of the one here. Before going there, she worked in the Phoenix, Arizona crime lab.

Article posted in the Democrat and Chronicle.

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