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New true crime show focuses on Northern Virginia company鈥檚 work

In the new show “The Genetic Detective” CeCe Moore works with Reston-based DNA technology company Parabon NanoLabs to solve cold cases using DNA and genealogy. (Courtesy ABC)

A Northern Virginia tech company that combines advanced DNA analysis with old fashioned genealogy to help police departments solve crimes is seeing its work go to the small screen.

“The Genetic Detective” debuts on Tuesday night on ABC. It stars CeCe Moore, a genealogist who works with Reston, Virginia-based to help police departments solve cold cases.

鈥淭he families and the surviving victims of these vicious crimes have waited for years and even decades in some of these cases,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淢y job is to help bring those answers, to provide those answers.鈥

Parabon analyzes DNA samples, which usually results in distant matches, while Moore, who is based on the West Coast, uses her skills to fill in the blanks of family trees. She first gained fame in the genealogy business by helping adoptees and others with unknown parentage learn more about their biological backgrounds.

Her work actually led to offers from television networks before, though Moore said she was hesitant because of the sensitive nature of some of those reunions. In 2018, she started working with Parabon to help solve crimes and thought those cases worked better for TV.

View the trailer for “The Genetic Detective” below:聽

鈥淲hen I started working with criminal work, unfortunately the damage is already done,鈥 said Moore. 鈥淚鈥檓 not going to cause damage by involving the media. Most of those cases have already been covered extensively.鈥

Most fictional crime series take great liberties when portraying the use of DNA to help solve cases in an hour’s time, often making it appear more simple and certain than it really is. Moore is hoping the series will dispel that notion, and others associated with the work she does with Parabon.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of misconceptions out there,鈥 said Moore. Another one is that commercial ancestry sites like 鈥23 and Me鈥 are used to help solve those cases, she said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to me that people understand how we鈥檙e using DNA in these cases and how we鈥檙e not,” Moore added.

Moore said it was also important to be able to explain the work that goes into solving these crimes.

鈥淲e do delve in deeper than normal,鈥 said Moore. 鈥淚 think they鈥檙e going to get a more realistic idea than is typically presented on television.鈥

Moore and Parabon started working together in May of 2018. In that first year, they helped solve, on average, more than one cold case per week, she said. Moore started filming with ABC in the fall of 2018, so the first cases in this series focus on those initial cases Parabon helped crack.

You won’t see any local cases in the show, yet, because police departments in this area had not started working with Parabon. However, one of the victims in a future episode was from Easton, Maryland.

Moore said it鈥檚 possible subsequent cases from the D.C. region will be featured in the future.

John Domen

John has been with 海角社区app since 2016 but has spent most of his life living and working in the DMV, covering nearly every kind of story imaginable around the region. He鈥檚 twice been named Best Reporter by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association.聽

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