From the 5 to 10 October 2013, the 11th Indo Pacific Association of Law, Medicine and Science Congress (INPALMS) was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Apart from pre-congress workshops in forensic histopathology, anthropology, mass disaster management, crime scene investigation and pediatric forensic pathology, a workshop on post-mortem computed tomography (PMCT) was offered for the participants. For the INPALMS congress, it was the first forensic imaging workshop indicating the growing demand and the increasing interest on forensic imaging techniques in Asia. Experts from Zurich (Switzerland) and Lausanne (Switzerland) gave an introduction into the possibilities of PMCT, including a hands-on demonstration of PMCT-angiography, on-site at the National Institute of Forensic Medicine also known as Institut Perubatan Forensik Negara (IPFN) based at the Hospital Kuala Lumpur (HKL). Forensic Medicine services in the Ministry of Health Malaysia installed a new state-ofthe-art CT scanner at the Forensic Department at HKL which is setting new standards as referral centre for the whole country. The head of department, Dr. Mohd. Shah Mahmood (congress chairman), organized the international meeting and under the presidency of Prof. Dr. P.K. Chattopadhyay. During the welcome dinner, a cultural program showed the impressive cultural diversity of Malaysia with Chinese, Indian and Indonesian influences. The Malaysian minister of health, Dr. Subramaniam Sathasivam, honored the congress with his presence, stressing out the importance of forensic investigations for any society during his speech. For the scientific sessions of the congress, scientists and forensic experts from more than 40 countries presented their work for 5 days. One scientific session was entirely dedicated to post-mortem imaging dealing with a variety of hot topics from Dual Energy CT to DTI Imaging, from the role of forensic radiographers in post-mortem imaging to the future perspectives of this sub-specialty. Finally, during the closing ceremony the best-talk award for the forensic imaging session was awarded to a local researcher, Dr. Mansharan Kaur Chainchel Singh, who works with PMCT at the IPFN, HKL in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia presenting a talk about her work on coronary artery calcium score and central obesity in forensic autopsy.