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DNA TESTING RECEIVING DAY IN COURT : EVIDENCE'S VALUE STILL QUESTIONED.


Byline: Matt Crenson Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

It was one of those chance-in-a-million things.

Not long after she was raped, an Indiana woman thought she spotted her assailant on the street. Police arrested the man, took his blood and sent it to a crime lab for DNA analysis DNA analysis Any technique used to analyze genes and DNA. See Chromosome walking, DNA fingerprinting, Footprinting, In situ hybridization, Jeffries' probe, Jumping libraries, PCR, RFLP analysis, Southern blot hybridization. .

Robert Flowers said he hadn't committed the crime, and lab results showed he was telling the truth: His DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 didn't match the rapist's. But it came so close, the laboratory just had to ask - could Robert Flowers have a brother? He could, and he did. And, eventually, Robert's look-alike brother was convicted of the rape.

In cases like that, DNA evidence Among the many new tools that science has provided for the analysis of forensic evidence is the powerful and controversial analysis of deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, the material that makes up the genetic code of most organisms.  seems to have almost supernatural powers to clear the innocent and convict the guilty. But, 10 years after it first was used in a U.S. courtroom, questions persist about how such evidence is employed.

``People come up to me and they ask, `Is this stuff any good?' '' said Harlan Levy, a former assistant district attorney in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 and a staunch supporter of DNA fingerprinting DNA fingerprinting or DNA profiling, any of several similar techniques for analyzing and comparing DNA from separate sources, used especially in law enforcement to identify suspects from hair, blood, semen, or other biological materials found at . ``I think it's amazing that 10 years into this technology, people are still asking that.''

After years of debate over population variability, the genetic patterns of isolated ethnic groups and other arcane issues, lawyers and scientists finally agree that DNA testing DNA testing
Analysis of DNA (the genetic component of cells) in order to determine changes in genes that may indicate a specific disorder.

Mentioned in: Acoustic Neuroma, Retinoblastoma, Von Willebrand Disease
 can match the blood or semen recovered at a crime scene to a given individual.

What they don't agree on is what that match means.

``I'm not against DNA technology, I'm just against stupid uses of it,'' said William Thompson, a law professor at the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). , Irvine, and a former member of O.J. Simpson's defense team.

Simpson's defense illustrates how the debate has changed in the last decade. In the early days, the defense might have argued that the blood matched to Simpson through DNA analysis could have belonged to somebody else.

But that's not common any more; DNA testing has proven itself as a means of identification comparable in reliability to fingerprinting. So defense lawyers didn't waste time arguing that the incriminating in·crim·i·nate  
tr.v. in·crim·i·nat·ed, in·crim·i·nat·ing, in·crim·i·nates
1. To accuse of a crime or other wrongful act.

2.
 samples attributed to Simpson really belonged to somebody else. Instead, they contended that every bit of DNA evidence could be explained by mishandling, laboratory contamination or the planting of evidence.

That argument raised questions the prosecution couldn't answer, Thompson said, which is why the jury acquitted Simpson.

But things might have turned out differently a decade ago, when lawyers were less sophisticated about DNA evidence and the debate centered on the probability of a coincidental match between blood or semen found at a crime scene and that of an innocent defendant.

That issue, which has become much less important in recent years, frequently leads to misconceptions about DNA evidence by attorneys, judges and juries.

First of all, a DNA match doesn't prove a person committed a crime; additional evidence almost always is needed for a conviction. But defense lawyers worry that juries give a match more weight than it deserves.

When a DNA match is introduced in court, it almost always is presented with a number known as a random-match probability. But nobody, DNA experts complain, seems to understand what that number means.

The random-match probability is an estimate of the chance that a randomly selected person will share the DNA pattern present in both the defendant and the sample from the crime scene. In most cases, the random-match probability is one in a million, one in a billion or higher.

The random-match probability also says nothing about the other issues in the case. Although laboratory error or planting of evidence also could explain a match, those possibilities aren't accounted for in that one-in-a-billion number.

Jurors rarely understand that, said Jonathan Koehler, a professor of behavioral science behavioral science
n.
A scientific discipline, such as sociology, anthropology, or psychology, in which the actions and reactions of humans and animals are studied through observational and experimental methods.
 at the University of Texas at Austin “University of Texas” redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System.
The University of Texas at Austin (often referred to as The University of Texas, UT Austin, UT, or Texas
.

His research shows that jurors, perhaps dazzled by figures in the millions or billions, focus on the random-match probability and often ignore laboratory error as a possible explanation for the correlation between the defendant's DNA and that from the crime scene.

When the Orange County Sheriff's Department Orange County Sheriff's Department could refer to several sheriff's offices in the United States including:
  • Orange County Sheriff's Department (California)
  • Orange County Sheriff's Office (Florida)
  • Orange County Sheriff's Department (North Carolina)
 sent 50 blood samples to three laboratories in the early days of DNA testing, the accuracy rate was about 98 percent. Presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
, labs have improved since then, but nobody knows how much. Subsequent studies have found that laboratories falsely match samples once in a few hundred to a thousand times.

``We are concerned that this effect, in combination with misleading assurances from forensic science The application of scientific knowledge and methodology to legal problems and criminal investigations.

Sometimes called simply forensics, forensic science encompasses many different fields of science, including anthropology, biology, chemistry, engineering, genetics,
 experts that laboratory errors are impossible or nearly impossible, could lead to convictions where acquittals might otherwise result,'' Koehler and two colleagues wrote in the Winter 1995 issue of Jurimetrics Journal.

Yet despite the complaints of critics, in 10 years, no one has been shown to have been falsely convicted by DNA evidence. That may be because laboratory errors are relatively rare and tend to be so easy to spot when they do happen that they need not be considered in most cases.

``DNA is the best tool for identifying the innocent and the guilty that we have,'' said former New York prosecutor Levy, whose book, ``And the Blood Cried Out,'' examines the method in a series of case studies.

In one of those cases, a Baltimore woman was raped by a man who broke into her house at night and put a pillowcase pil·low·case  
n.
A removable covering for a pillow. Also called pillowslip.


pillowcase or pillowslip
Noun

a removable washable cover for a pillow

Noun 1.
 over her head so she couldn't see him. Carol Sanders identified the rapist as her ex-boyfriend, a man who had been stalking her for months, and insisted she knew him well enough to recognize him even without getting a good look at him.

When police caught up with John Davis, however, he swore he hadn't committed the crime. He even went so far as to suggest police investigate an acquaintance, Gregory Ritter rit·ter  
n. pl. ritter
A knight.



[German, from Middle High German riter, from Middle Dutch ridder, from r
. Ritter looked just like him, Davis said, and knew the victim because he had once dated her roommate.

Accustomed to such claims, investigators ignored Davis' attempts to clear himself. They arrested him and charged him with the rape, taking a blood sample for DNA testing.

Four months later, Davis was freed because his DNA didn't match that of the rapist. And Ritter was convicted and sentenced to 40 years in prison.

It's not uncommon for eyewitnesses to accuse the wrong person in a rape case. In fact, DNA fingerprinting has shown that eyewitness identifications are notoriously unreliable.

Eyewitness testimony helped convict 24 of the 28 people described in a 1996 National Institute of Justice report whose cases were later overturned by DNA evidence. And other forensic methods, such as hair analysis, were involved in about two-thirds of those wrongful convictions.

DNA fingerprinting is about to get even more powerful, its proponents say. Most states now have data banks containing DNA profiles of people already convicted of sexual or related offenses. When police begin investigating a new crime, they can test DNA collected at the scene to see if it matches anybody in the data bank with a history of a similar offense.

``With what we know about the rates of recidivism recidivism: see criminology. ,'' said James Wooley, an assistant U.S. attorney in Ohio, ``it can only be a tremendous help.''

And, as DNA evidence has in so many other cases, data-banking also can help clear the innocent.

The first case ever prosecuted in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  using a DNA data bank was the rape and murder of a Minneapolis woman who lived near a halfway house halfway house /half·way house/ (haf´wa hous) a residence for patients (e.g., mental patients, drug addicts, alcoholics) who do not require hospitalization but who need an intermediate degree of care until they can return to the community.  for sex offenders.

The first thing investigators did was check the DNA left at the scene against that of the six men in the halfway house. None matched the DNA, said Steve Redding Redding, city (1990 pop. 66,462), seat of Shasta co., N central Calif., on the Sacramento River; inc. 1872. A principal tourist center for a mountain and lake region, it also has lumbering, food-processing, and diverse manufacturing. , who prosecuted the case. But a check of the entire database found that an illegal immigrant illegal immigrant n. an alien (non-citizen) who has entered the United States without government permission or stayed beyond the termination date of a visa. (See: alien)  matched the sample. Martin Perez was convicted and sentenced to life without parole.

In another Minnesota case, police arrested a man and accused him of 15 rapes. He had a previous sex conviction and was identified as the rapist by three of the 15 victims. But when police checked the DNA database, their suspect's DNA didn't match the rapist's.

``DNA testing saved his butt, and it's good that it did,'' Redding said.

Most states haven't yet entered many offenders into their databases, so cases like the ones in Minnesota still are relatively rare. But as the databases grow, law enforcement officials expect to catch a lot more criminals with the DNA they leave behind.

That hasn't escaped the attention of criminals. Some rapists now use condoms the same way a burglar uses gloves - to avoid leaving identifying marks at the crime scene.

That may be the most convincing testimonial to DNA fingerprinting and how far it has come in 10 years.

``This testing,'' Levy said, ``is going to become more and more like the fingerprint it was originally promised to be.''

CAPTION(S):

2 Photos, Box

Photo: (1) Thomas Webb III, center, leaves a Norman, Okla., court after DNA tests overturned a rape conviction.

Associated Press

(2) Judge Lance Ito inspects examples of DNA sequences during O.J. Simpson's criminal trial. Instead of challenging DNA testing's validity, Simpson's defense team focused on the handling of samples to impugn im·pugn  
tr.v. im·pugned, im·pugn·ing, im·pugns
To attack as false or questionable; challenge in argument: impugn a political opponent's record.
 the evidence.

John McCoy/Daily News

Box: DNA fingerprinting

Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jan 26, 1997
Words:1523
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