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New and notable

Meet Suzanne Bell

The new Department of Forensic and Investigative Science Chair

Suzanne Bell, professor of forensic chemistry, was appointed chair for the Department of Forensic and Investigative Science in summer 2017.

Bell will guide the department to increased research activity, competitiveness and greater national prominence. She succeeds Gerald Lang, who has led the department for the past three years.

“Suzanne Bell is an accomplished scholar and educator in the field of forensic chemistry,” said Gregory Dunaway, dean of the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences. “She has been an integral part of the department’s development over the years. I have every confidence that she will be an outstanding leader and strong advocatefor the department, its faculty and its students.” 

Bell is the recipient of numerous grants and contracts, with her current work supported by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. 

She worked for three years with the New Mexico State Police Crime Laboratory as a forensic chemist, drug analyst, arson analyst and crime scene investigator. She then worked for nine years at Los Alamos National Laboratory before working as a professor at Eastern Washington University. In 2003, she joined the faculty of WVU’s C. Eugene Bennett Department of Chemistry. She teaches crime scene and blood spatter courses in addition to forensic chemistry and other chemistry courses. 

Bell earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry and criminal justice from Northern Arizona University, a master’s degree in forensic science from the University of New Haven and a PhD in analytical chemistry from New Mexico State University. 

She is on the Forensic Education Programs Accreditation Commission (FEPAC), the editorial board of the Journal of Forensic Sciences and is a member of scientific working groups and scientific area committees in seized drugs and gunshot residue. 

The Department of Forensic and Investigative Science is recognized among the best programs in the nation, offering FEPAC-accredited degrees at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. With the recent addition of a new research-based PhD program, it is one of the only departments in the country to offer a Bachelor of Science, Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy in forensic science. The department also offers a complete range of academic and outreach programs including a minor and a partnership with the WVU College of Law to provide instruction in the LLM in Forensic Justice.