Internationally Acclaimed
Forensic Scientist Dr. Henry C.
Lee Dies, Leaving Remarkable
Legacy
Dr. Lee was a distinguished professor at the University of New Haven for more than 50 years and former Commissioner of Connecticut Public Safety.
He was not on the list.
World-renowned forensic scientist Dr. Henry C. Lee passed away peacefully on Friday, March 27, 2026 at his home in Henderson, Nevada, displaying remarkable strength, grace and resilience during a brief illness. He was 87 years old. His passing was announced by his family, in conjunction with the University of New Haven, where he served as a distinguished professor for more than 50 years.
In his final days, Dr. Lee was finalizing a book regarding missing-persons investigations, which will be published in the near future. He has authored or co-authored more than 40 books.
Dr. Lee joined the University of New Haven in 1975 and founded the University’s forensic science program, developing it from a small classroom equipped with a single fingerprint kit into an internationally recognized multi-disciplined academic department considered one of the nation’s best.
In 1998, he founded the Henry C. Lee Institute of Forensic
Science, and, in 2010, the University opened an ultra-modern home for the
institute, a three-story, 15,000 square-foot facility featuring the most
cutting-edge forensics investigation technology, including a crime scene
center, a high-tech forensic room, a crisis management center, and a
state-of-the-art learning center. "The Institute will become a catalyst
enabling professionals in the field to work together," Dr. Lee said at its
unveiling. "The world then becomes a small community engaged in fighting
crime."
For more than 20 years while at the University of New Haven, Dr. Lee served as chief criminalist for the State of Connecticut and director of the Connecticut State Police Forensic Science Laboratory from 1978 to 2000 and was Commissioner of the state’s Department of Public Safety and Connecticut State Police from 1998-2000. He was Chief Emeritus for the state of Connecticut’s Division of Scientific Services from 2000 to 2010.
"What he has done has changed the face of forensic
knowledge among police officers and other criminal justice professionals,"
Mary Galvin, a retired Connecticut State’s attorney, told the New York Times in
2000, as he concluded his time as Commissioner for Connecticut’s Department of
Public Safety.
"Dr. Lee was a remarkable individual," said University of New Haven President Jens Frederiksen. "His contributions to our University as well as forensic science and law enforcement are extraordinary and unmatched. His legacy lives on in the generations of students and law enforcement professionals he impacted throughout his brilliant career. We send our deepest condolences to his family and those mourning his passing."
Throughout his legendary career, Dr. Lee has served as a forensics expert in all 50 states and more than 46 countries, and has lectured in more than 70 countries. He has been a consultant for 600 law enforcement agencies and has testified more than 1,000 times in both criminal and civil courts in the United States and abroad, most notably in the O.J. Simpson case. For some of the highest-profile cases, Dr. Lee provided investigative assistance, including the murder of JonBenét Ramsey, the Helle Crafts woodchipper murder, the Laci Peterson case, the death of Chandra Levy, the kidnapping of Elizabeth Smart, 9/11 forensics investigation, and the reinvestigation of the John F. Kennedy assassination.
He hosted a crime-documentary series in 2004 on then Court
TV titled, "Trace Evidence: The Case Files of Dr. Henry Lee."
Dr. Lee was born November 22, 1938, in Rugao, Jiangsu, China, where a multi-story museum stands in his honor. His family emigrated to Taiwan where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in police administration from the Central Police College in 1960. He became a police officer in the Taipei Police Department, rising to captain at the age of 22, the youngest in Taiwanese history.
Dr. Lee moved with his late wife to the United States in
1964. Dr. Lee earned his Ph.D. (1975) and master’s (1974) degrees in
biochemistry from New York University, and a bachelor’s degree in forensic
science from John Jay College (1972). Dr. Lee has been conferred 30 honorary
degrees, including from the University of New Haven in 1991 and 2010. Dr. Lee
was an emeritus member of the University’s Board of Governors for nearly 30
years.
He gave the Commencement address at the University’s 1991 Winter Commencement and its Spring Commencement in 2025, when he told graduates, "You must also understand the importance of positive thinking. There is no obstacle that cannot be overcome if you persist and believe." Dr. Lee’s slogan was: "Make the impossible possible."
Dr. Lee was pre-deceased by his wife Margaret Lee in 2017. He is survived by his daughter Sherry Hersey and son Stanley Lee, their respective spouses, Ted and Romy, and their four grandchildren, David Hersey and Rachel Hersey Hotaj, and Joseph and Alexander Lee, as well as his wife Angel Xiaping Jiang and her sons Yan Liu and Tianchen Liu.
The eleventh of 13 children, Dr. Lee credited his sister Dr. Sylvia Lee-Huang for supporting him throughout his studies and his career. Dr. Lee recently said, "Without the support of Dr. Sylvia Lee-Huang, there would be no Dr. Henry Lee."
Committed to giving back, he had contributed his speaking
honoraria and major gifts over the years. Ever humble, he did not want a
memorial or celebration of life.
Lee worked on famous cases such as the JonBenét Ramsey murder case, the Helle Crafts wood chipper murder (the first murder conviction in Connecticut without the victim's body,) the O. J. Simpson and Laci Peterson cases, the 9/11 forensic investigation, the Washington, DC sniper shootings and reinvestigated the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
He investigated the March 19, 2004 shooting incident of Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian and Vice President Annette Lu.
Following the O. J. Simpson case, Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr hired Lee to join his investigation of the death of Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster in Fort Marcy Park on July 20, 1993.
Lee also was consulted on the 1991 death of investigative journalist Danny Casolaro, who died in a West Virginia motel room. Initially, Lee said the evidence presented to him by police was consistent with suicide. A few years later when additional evidence from the hotel scene was revealed to him, Lee formally withdrew his earlier conclusion and stated, "a reconstruction is only as good as the information supplied by the police".
He was consulted as a blood spatter analyst for defense during the trial of Michael Peterson, a fiction writer and politician from North Carolina who in 2003 was convicted of the murder of his wife, Kathleen Peterson.
In 2007, Lee testified as a prosecution expert witness at the first trial of Cal Harris, an upstate New York car dealer accused of killing his wife on the night of September 11, 2001. Since no body has ever been found, the state's best evidence of foul play was some medium-velocity castoff impact blood spatter on the walls of the house's garage and kitchen. Lee told the jury that it could only have come from someone lower than 29 inches (740 mm) above ground. Harris was convicted at that trial, and a retrial after new evidence emerged, but ultimately acquitted at a fourth trial after his conviction was overturned on appeal.
In 2008, Lee was involved in the early stages of
investigation in Orlando, Florida for the missing toddler Caylee Anthony.
In May 2007, California Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler, the judge in the Phil Spector murder trial, said that he had concluded "Lee hid or destroyed" a piece of evidence from the scene of actress Lana Clarkson's shooting. Lee denied the allegation, and "when he testified before Fidler, Lee said he was astonished and insulted by claims by two former members of Spector's defense team that he had collected a small white object that was never turned over to prosecutors, as the law requires." University of Southern California law professor Jean Rosenbluth said that Judge Fidler's ruling was "very narrow" and noted that the judge had made no finding that Lee had lied on the stand or acted maliciously.

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