Updated 5/18/2015
Introduction
Introduction
In the spring of 2006 three
players on the Duke lacrosse team were indicted for rape and kidnapping. The accuser claimed to have been raped
by three men at least one of whom ejaculated inside of her body. Some DNA results emerged in the spring
of 2006. Eventually additional evidence was uncovered, and the overwhelming
perception that this evidence was exculpatory brought about a major turning
point in public opinion prior to the declaration of innocence. After evidence of his misconduct
emerged, the district attorney withdrew from the case, which then fell to the
office of the Attorney General of North Carolina to investigate. After the investigation was complete,
the Attorney General declared the three players to be innocent in the spring of
2007, and the criminal matter ended.
The Duke lacrosse case is
generally perceived as a highly visible case of prosecutorial misconduct and a
rush to judgment by the press and the general public. However with the 2014 publication of William Cohan’s book The Price of Silence, this view has now
been challenged, and Mr. Cohan’s view of the DNA evidence is at odds with many
who have commented on the case.
Therefore, a reevaluation of the DNA evidence is warranted on the
basis of a general understanding of this case, as well as other cases in which
the DNA evidence plays a central role, such as the Knox/Sollecito case, a
frequent subject of this blog.
The initial results from the rape kit: Is the absence of evidence evidence of
absence?
The initial results from the
NC SBI laboratory did not find semen, blood, or saliva. Subsequently Y-chromosomal (Y-STR)
tests were performed at a private laboratory. Investigators found no DNA from any Duke lacrosse player in
the rape kit items but did find DNA from Mangum’s boyfriend. DNA from plastic fingernails was also
extracted. Some of the results
from the private lab were released in a brief report issued on May 10, 2006,
but other results were withheld.
Apart from the plastic fingernails (discussed below), how significant
was the lack of DNA?
One blogger posed questions
along these lines to several highly qualified experts, including Dan Krane,
Elizabeth Johnson, and William Thompson.
Dan Krane responded: “It is worth noting that DNA tests are amazingly
sensitive (DNA profiles can be generated from as little material as that left
behind in a fingerprint) and Y-STR tests have the potential of determining a
male’s DNA profile even when a female’s DNA is present in hundreds or thousands
of times greater quantities. Scientists are always wary of asserting that the
absence of evidence is not proof of absence but it certainly is reasonable to
expect to find a rapist’s DNA associated with a victim when the victim presents
herself to investigators within hours of an attack and when she has not bathed,
the rapist did not use a condom and ejaculation occurred.”
These experts gave thoughtful, nuanced
replies. The consensus view seemed to be that the degree to which the absence
of evidence was evidence of absence lies in the particulars of each case.
What then are the
particulars of the Duke lacrosse case?
A site at Reed College lists the following guidelines for preserving
evidence of a possible sexual assault:
“Do not shower
or douche
Try not to
urinate. Urinating may reduce the ability to detect “date rape” drugs
If there was
oral contact, do not smoke, eat, or brush teeth
Do not change
clothes. If you have already changed your clothes, place them in a paper bag
(plastic may destroy evidence) If you haven’t changed, keep the original
clothes on and bring an extra set to wear home from the hospital
Go to a hospital with the
capability of providing a SAFE exam and request the exam. The cost of a SAFE
examination is paid for from a state fund.”
The alleged victim in the
Duke lacrosse case was taken into custody shortly after the incident and did
not have the opportunity to shower or to change clothes. Therefore, the chances of preserving
evidence would have been high, if an actual assault had occurred. William Anderson wrote, “Furthermore,
no one — no one — who inspected the room (and police gave that bathroom a
thorough inspection, taking swabs everywhere and testing for DNA) found any evidence
of bleach products having been recently used. They found no DNA of Mangum, and
none of [Collin] Finnerty and [Reade] Seligmann, and nothing else that
demonstrated that either of those two young men had ever been in that bathroom.” Parenthetically, Taylor and Johnson
reported that no fingerprints belonging to Mr. Finnerty were found in the
bathroom (Until Proven Innocent, p. 183).
Unfortunately, the question
of whether or not the accuser said that the victims used condoms has been not
entirely without controversy. Stuart
Taylor and KC Johnson wrote (Until Proven Innocent, p. 327), “In her report
from the night of the alleged attack, [SANE nurse Tara] Levicy had written
without qualification that Mangum had said repeatedly…the rapists had used no
condoms and that she was sure that at least one had ejaculated—in her mouth. But on January 10 [2007, nine months later], according to
[Linwood] Wilson, Levicy stated that Mangum “said ‘no’ but wasn’t really sure”
whether her attackers had used condoms.”
Even if one finds Ms. Levicy to be credible about Ms. Mangum’s lack of
certainty (which I do not), DNA may be transferred by simple physical contact,
as is borne out in studies of simulated strangulation. In addition, perspiration contains DNA, and sebaceous fluid is a probable source of touch DNA,
according to a study by Vecchiotti, Filippini and their coworkers. Thus even when a condom is used during
a sexual assault, there may be transfer of DNA.
Asked whether or not the use
of a condom could have been detected, Elizabeth Johnson responded, “Testing
for these substances is not typically done, despite what you see on CSI. There
has been some research done re spermicides on condoms, but none of this is done
as part of a typical test and validated methods for casework aren’t there yet.” Of course, even if condom use were
detected, it would not differentiate between consensual and nonconsensual
sexual activity.
The lack of body fluids is
absence of evidence in its own right.
It also weakens the DNA evidence, meaning that a given DNA profile found
in the absence of a particular fluid might have arisen from any biological
tissue or fluid. Peter Gill
describes framework or hierarchy of levels (Misleading
DNA Evidence, p. 19) at which DNA evidence can be evaluated:
1.
The sub-source level refers to the strength
of evidence of the DNA profile itself.
2.
The source level is an evaluation of the
strength of the DNA profile if it can be associated with a particular body
fluid, such as semen or blood
3.
The activity level associates the DNA with
the crime itself, e.g. sexual assault.
4.
The highest
level deals with the ultimate issue of guilt/innocence.
Professor Gill’s book gives
examples of cases in which a forensic scientist attempted to claim a higher
level for the evidence than was warranted, based upon principles of forensics
and probability. The DNA of the
rape kit is sub-source DNA, in this categorization.
The lack of DNA from the
accused coupled with the lack of body fluids and the lack of other evidence in
the bathroom is strongly exculpatory.
Whether or not it constitutes “proof of innocence” cannot be determined
without defining the term.
However, I would weight this lack of evidence more heavily that
eyewitness testimony, even if the latter came from a credible witness, owing to
the well-known problems with eyewitness testimony. Ms. Mangum’s credibility is questionable on a number of
grounds.
The plastic fingernails in the trashcan
Ms. Mangum’s painted
fingernails were placed in the trashcan of the bathroom and the players pointed
them out to the police investigators days later. David Evans could not be excluded as a donor. The summary of conclusions from the
office of the Attorney General of North Carolina stated on p. 12, "First,
statistically, the chance of randomly selecting an individual from the
population that could be included in this sample would be approximately 1 in
1000." With respect to the autosomal (standard DNA) profile, David Evans
(along with about 2% of the population) cannot be excluded as a donor. Likewise in the Y-chromosomal (YSTR)
testing, David Evans cannot be excluded as a donor. Although the summary report did not explain the
calculations, the value of 1 in 1000 probably derives from combining the data
from the two types of DNA testing.
The author of a 2014 book on
the case (The Price of Silence),
William Cohan clearly thought that the DNA was highly incriminating, discussing
it on pp. 277-278 and pp. 325-326, among other places. In the final chapter, Denouement,
he returned to the subject on p. 602:
“What remains unresolved is, if in fact it was David Evans’s DNA on
Mangum’s red plastic fingernails, how did it get there?”
DNA evidence beneath real
fingernails typically is probative, not necessarily conclusive, evidence against
a defendant. Studies have shown
that mixtures of DNA under fingernails are seen about 5% of the time (Gill, pp.
43-46). However, there is less to
the DNA from the plastic fingernails than meets the eye. Taylor and Johnson wrote (Until Proven Innocent, p. 221),
“And it would later become clear…that the DNA that might (or might not) have
come from Evans had not necessarily
been lodged “under” a plastic fingernail.
Rather, the SBI had extracted and mixed together all of the DNA taken
from all surfaces of the three used plastic fingernails found in the wastebasket
in Evans’ bathroom.” Moreover, a case
in Britain involving a taxi driver, David Butler suggests some additional
caveats. His DNA was apparently
found on the fingernails of a murdered woman Anne Marie Foy. He was convicted partially on the basis
of the DNA evidence but later released.
A plausible theory is that he handled money which later carried his DNA
to the victim. There are not many
forensic details that have been made public, but a few things can be gleaned
from the information that is available. One is that Mr. Butler's skin was
unusually flaky. Two is Hannah Barnes' report that "The victim was also wearing a glitter nail polish, which proved
particularly attractive to dirt - and DNA."
The defense correctly noted
that David Evans was not uniquely identified in either of the tests. The defense’s position was that if
David Evans were a donor of the DNA, then there existed a plausible route for
innocent DNA deposition, namely secondary transfer from materials in trashcan,
such as dental floss and tissue paper.
Defense attorney Joseph Cheshire, "Any expert and any person in the
world will tell you that your [own] DNA is in your bathroom." (Cohan, p.
242). Saliva is a good source of
DNA, for example. The office of
the attorney general of North Carolina accepted the possibility of secondary
transfer as a reasonable explanation.
In the summary document pertaining to this case, the authors wrote: “Third,
to the extent that Evans’s DNA could not be excluded, the SBI experts confirmed
that the DNA could easily have been transferred to the fingernails from other
materials in the trash can.”
It is uncontroversial that
the presence of DNA does not indicate the time or manner of its deposition. This cuts both ways: one cannot be
certain that the DNA on the plastic fingernails arrived by secondary transfer,
but neither can one rule it out. Secondary
transfer in DNA forensics is well established, and tertiary transfer has been
observed under some circumstances.
Neither the amount of DNA nor the completeness of the DNA profile is a
reliable guide as to whether the DNA arrived by primary transfer or secondary
transfer. Joe Minor and Suzanna Ryan have written several well-researched and readable articles that cover the
subjects of DNA found on touched objects and secondary transfer. Review articles by Van Oorshot and
colleagues and by Meakin and Jamieson in academic forensic journals may be
consulted for more detailed information.
Shedding and transferring
DNA is perhaps more common than the general public appreciates. Leslie Prey wrote,
"We all shed DNA, leaving traces of our identity practically everywhere we
go. Forensic scientists use DNA left behind on cigarette butts, phones,
handles, keyboards, cups, and numerous other objects, not to mention the
genetic content found in drops of bodily fluid, like blood and semen (Van
Oorschot & Jones, 1997)." The issues of shedding and transferring DNA were perhaps not
very important when DNA profiling was in its infancy. However, the introduction of techniques based on the
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) meant that much smaller amounts of DNA are
needed now than in the first generation of DNA profiling. This is because the DNA is increased in
amount (amplified) many times over prior to the analysis. The more recent development of low copy
number DNA profiling means that still smaller amounts of DNA can be typed, less
than a dozen cells.
Although secondary transfer
from the waste in the trashcan is highly plausible, primary or secondary transfer
via the players themselves is also possible.
Joe Minor wrote, “On one occasion, I
swabbed my own hand after handshakes at a social function to determine the
presence of other epithelial cells. The laboratory was able to obtain a mixture of my DNA as well
as two other individuals.” Suzanna
Ryan wrote, “One study performed by Lowe, et
al., was designed to highlight a ‘worst case’ scenario and involved two
individuals. The first was determined to be a poor shedder and the second a
good shedder. These two shook hands for one minute. The poor shedder had washed
their hands immediately prior to the experiment whereas the good shedder had
not. After shaking hands the poor shedder held a sterile plastic tube for 10
seconds. The tube was then swabbed and tested for the presence of DNA. This
experiment was performed on two sets of good shedder/poor shedder pairs.
Surprisingly, in one of the pairs, only the good shedder's DNA was obtained
from the plastic tube, with no evidence of a mixture including the poor
shedder!”
Results from Vecchiotti’s
laboratory published in 2014 are consistent with this result. Suppose that David Evans shook hands
with Ms. Mangum when she arrived. That or a number of other events, such as
handling money, might also transfer DNA.
As a team captain and resident of the house, Mr. Evans might
have shaken hands with Ms. Mangum when she entered or touched money that she
later handled.
As persuasive as these arguments
are however, one even more powerful argument may also be offered in Mr. Evans’
defense using the tables that Professor Giannelli presented in
the chapter “DNA Profiling” within the book Race
to Injustice. At least two
other males contributed DNA to the sample (not lacrosse players nor other men
who attended the party). In the
YSTR profile ten of sixteen loci (locations within the Y chromosome) show the
presence of three contributors and two more loci show the presence of at least
two contributors. In the autosomal
profile some loci (places within other chromosomes) clearly show that at least
three individuals contributed DNA.
This is very problematic for the prosecution. If one acknowledges
that this DNA arrived in a way unrelated to a sexual assault, then how is it
possible to exclude the possibility that Mr. Evans’s DNA also arrived
innocently?
By itself, the presence of what
may be Mr. Evans’ DNA on the fingernails seems inculpatory; in the context of
the other profiles and given the strong possibility of secondary transfer by
multiple mechanisms, it is close to meaningless as evidence. Paul Giannelli summed up the DNA on the
plastic fingernails: “There was some probative value--but not much.” Followers of the Knox-Sollecito case will recognize that
the presence of additional male DNA donors is basically the same situation that
exists with Mr. Sollecito’s Y-chromosomal profile that is associated with the
bra clasp. The Gary Leiterman case
is perhaps the starkest example of this conundrum for the prosecution; the
additional profile belongs to someone who could not possibly have been present
at the crime scene.
Two more issues deserve
attention, one of which is the difference in how the SBI versus DNA security
interpreted the mixture in the autosomal DNA profile. Taylor and Johnson wrote (Until Proven Innocent, p, 221), “The SBI had reported to
Nifong that there were ‘multiple contributors’ to the DNA mixture but that ‘no
conclusion [could] be rendered’ as to whether any of this fingernail DNA was
even a possible partial match with any of the players…Based on the same testing
process that had led the state lab to find no basis for any conclusion at all,
DNA Security offered a singularly weak conclusion: that 98% of the male population could be ‘excluded as a contributor to the mixture’ and that David
Evans was in the other 2 percent.”
Section 21C of the motion to compel discovery also quotes the same
portion of the SBI report, and footnote 70 emphasized that the SBI had said
“that no conclusion ‘could be rendered as to the contribution of DNA profiles
from the buccal swabs of the suspects’ in the minor profile BS 4522.”
The defense was rightly
concerned about this apparent discrepancy. It is possible that DNA Security used a suspect-centered
analysis, meaning that they analyzed the mixture with Evans’s reference profile
in hand. However in “Painting the
target around the matching profile: the Texas sharpshooter fallacy in forensic
DNA interpretation,” William Thompson observed, “In the absence of clear
standards for ‘inclusion’ and ‘exclusion’, different experts evaluating the same
evidence may reach different conclusions: one may conclude that a particular
suspect is ‘included’, while another concludes that the same suspect is
‘excluded’.” Indeed, Dror and Hampikian have shown that the same mixed DNA profile may be interpreted
differently by different groups of analysts. Unfortunately the interpretation of DNA mixtures is
presently still a somewhat subjective process; therefore, the difference
between the two labs may have an innocent explanation. However, another take-home message from
this case is that the defense should re-analyze DNA mixtures from items of
evidence.
Finally, Dr. Meehan’s own
DNA may have contaminated an item of evidence. Such contamination events are not uncommon. The ABA’s standard 4.1a states in part:
“(ix) reports of laboratory
contamination and other laboratory problems affecting testing procedures or
results relevant to the evaluation of the procedures and test results obtained
in the case and corrective actions taken in response…”
If there were a
contamination event, Dr. Meehan’s laboratory should have reported it. However, laboratories do not always do
so. In the Adam Scott and Gary
Leiterman cases, the laboratories simply ignored evidence of DNA contamination
in the negative controls (negative controls are experiments which should have
no DNA in them). There are also
instances in which negative controls were faked in some way, as noted by
William Thompson in “Tarnish on the gold standard.” The reasons to fake having performed the negative controls
include covering up a contamination event and increasing laboratory
throughput. Given the existence of
DNA contamination and of instances of samples being mixed up or mislabeled in
some way, it is surprising and disappointing that anyone opposes complete
disclosure of the raw data, contamination logs, standard operating procedures,
and any other pertinent records.
The DNA evidence released in the fall
On 27 October 2006 Nifong
released some 1800 pages of material to the defense, but still did not include
a complete report. Although he
lacked training in this area, defense attorney Brad Bannon did an extensive
study of the material and was able to glean the essential information that the
Y- chromosomal DNA of four unidentified men (men who were not at the party or
Mangum’s boyfriend) had been found in the items of evidence from the rape kit. When this information become public
knowledge, it was a major turning point in the case, one that helped to shift public
opinion in favor of the three accused students.
These profiles are important
for at least three reasons. One is
that the finding of DNA serves as evidence that the tests were working, in
other words the results functioned as a positive control. The technique of amplifying DNA using
the polymerase chain reaction (which is central to modern profiling) is
susceptible to inhibitors of DNA polymerase, the enzyme that copies the DNA. The lack of a DNA profile might in
principle, arise from the presence of inhibitors, as opposed to the absence of
DNA. Of course, it is likely that
the lab ran positive controls, but this sort of information might not come to
light unless a DNA expert had reviewed the case for the defense. Two is that Ms. Mangum’s sexual
activity provides an explanation for the edema noted in her examination. Three is that Ms. Mangum had claimed no
sexual activity for a week, and these results raised doubts about her
credibility, which would have been a central issue if the case had come to
trial.
Using the information that
they had obtained a month and a half earlier, the defense teams jointly crafted
a motion to compel discovery and filed it on 13 December 2006. Besides the information gleaned above,
the defense teams learned that DNA Security had tested more items than it had
disclosed in its report:
There
are significant gaps in the item sequence numbers…The worksheet shows that the
DNA extraction was performed n July 12, 2006, on that item, as well as items
labeled “16074C” and “16075C,” which are nowhere otherwise identified in the
DNA Security materials. But on this
worksheet itself, under the “name” column, someone typed “Bobby” and
“Owen.” “Quantification Worksheet
Q-181”75 and “PCR Worksheet Number A-464”76 reflect
quantification & amplification work on those three extractions the
following day, July 14, 2006.
“Analysis Worksheet Number G-592” reflects analysis of those extractions
the following day, July 14, 2006.
But nowhere in the materials do the DNA profiles generated from those
analyses appear. The phenomenon repeats
itself throughout the underlying materials from DNA security.77
Students of the Knox/Sollecito case are familiar with
this kind of withholding of evidence, except on a larger scale; there are many
samples for which DNA quantification was performed but for which no
electropherogram (loosely speaking, an electropherogram is a picture of the sizes
of the DNA fragments) was produced.
DNA Security’s standard operating procedures with
respect to its reports were shown to be in marked contrast with its conduct in
this case.
52. Included in the materials provided to
the Defendants from DNA Security are the laboratory’s standard operating
procedures, which include guidelines for drafting “Reports and Documentation”
of analyses performed by the lab in each case:
Reports shall include:
·
Case identifier.
·
Description of
evidence examined.
·
Description of
methodology.
·
Name of each DNA
locus analyzed.
·
Results for each
DNA test.
·
Interpretative
statement of conclusions…
That the results for each
test should be part of the report is very clear. Yet Dr. Meehan chose to disregard this standard for reasons
that are open to speculation.
Perhaps he acted as he did because he wished to establish a business
relationship with the office of the district attorney or because of the
publicity that working on a high-profile case would bring his firm. The defense motion also noted, “the
troubling effect of its limited scope of reporting is that it allowed DNA
security to produce a report in this case that avoided disclosure of
exculpatory evidence, either in the form of potential contamination noted in
its testing, or as it relates to the discovery of DNA from multiple male
sources…” It is difficult to
overstate how different the actual results are from the results as portrayed in
the incomplete report from DNA Security produced on 12 May 2006.
DNA laboratory reports and the discovery of DNA
evidence
The American Bar
Association’s model rules make several important points regarding DNA evidence,
one of which also insists that the reports be complete. Standard 3.3a states, “(a) A summary of
all DNA testing and data interpretation should be recorded promptly in a
report.” Standard 4.1a states in
part, “(xi) material or information within the prosecutor’s possession or
control, including laboratory information or material, that would tend to
negate the guilt of the defendant or reduce the punishment of the defendant.”
Professor Paul Giannelli commented on the incomplete laboratory reports, “In any event, no attorney should have to search through the haystack for the exculpatory needle. A laboratory report should be comprehensive and include a section specifying the limitations of the technique used in the analysis. The report should also be comprehensible to laypersons.” (emphasis mine) Professor Giannelli noted that Dr. Brian Meehan also failed to meet the standards for reports laid out by the American Society of Crime Directors/Laboratory Accreditation, even though his laboratory relied upon this organization for accreditation.
Conclusions
The circumstances surrounding the absence of evidence coupled with the presence of DNA from other men is persuasive evidence of absence; no one who attended the party
sexually assaulted Ms. Mangum. The DNA that may be from David
Evans on the plastic fingernailsis very weak evidence against him; in isolation it would raise the
possibility of his participation in a sexual assault. However, there are plausible alternative explanations for
how his DNA arrived; therefore, if this were the only piece of evidence in the
case, it would not come anywhere close to the threshold of reasonable doubt. In the context of the absence of Mr.
Evans DNA in the rape kit and the presence of other men’s DNA on the plastic
fingernails, it loses almost all significance.
Regrettably, the withholding
of evidence is a common theme in miscarriages of justice; however, two factors
were not in Mr. Nifong’s favor. In
addition to North Carolina’s open discovery law, the defense would also have
been helped by the norms of discovery of DNA evidence as set forth in the ABA
standards, which would have allowed expert review of the data in its raw
form. Without any discovery of the
exculpatory DNA evidence, the case might have played out much differently,
especially if Mr. Nifong had been able to escape censure. If Mr. Nifong had brought the case to
trial, it is difficult to predict how a jury would weigh the fingernail DNA evidence against potential alibi witnesses for Mr. Evans (Mr. Finnerty and Mr. Seligman had electronic alibis). Juries have occasionally ignored strong alibi
evidence in favor of weak or questionable evidence, as in the cases of Jonathan Fleming and Russ Faria. Fortunately, the state's investigators came to the conclusion that Mr. Nifong should have, and Attorney general Roy Cooper ended the matter.
Update 5/18/2015
When Brad Bannon was preparing to defend David Evans, he read John Butler's textbook on DNA profiling. His cross-examination of Dr. Brian Meehan was one of the pivotal moments of the case. For the newest edition of his three-volume textbook Dr. Butler asked Mr. Bannon to comment on aspects of how a defense attorney would challenge DNA evidence. Mr. Bannon replied in part, "Did the lab follow acceptable standards of DNA analysis? Did it follow its own protocols? Is the lab applying those standards and protocols consistently or selectively? For example, why do you call a peak below 150 RFU as a true allele for one purpose, or in one case, but not for another? If there are such internal inconsistencies, do they usually inure to the benefit of one side's theory of the case? If so, is that evidence of bias?"
Mr. Bannon's point about consistency of threshold values for peaks is similar to one found in the textbook An Introduction to Forensic DNA analysis, 2nd ed. (Rudin, N. and Inman, K., CRC Press 2002, p. 121) states, “It is important to have some predetermined limit to distinguish what is signal and what is noise.” Without a clear guideline, a scientist may make choices that benefit his or her preferred hypothesis, even subconsciously.
Update 5/18/2015
When Brad Bannon was preparing to defend David Evans, he read John Butler's textbook on DNA profiling. His cross-examination of Dr. Brian Meehan was one of the pivotal moments of the case. For the newest edition of his three-volume textbook Dr. Butler asked Mr. Bannon to comment on aspects of how a defense attorney would challenge DNA evidence. Mr. Bannon replied in part, "Did the lab follow acceptable standards of DNA analysis? Did it follow its own protocols? Is the lab applying those standards and protocols consistently or selectively? For example, why do you call a peak below 150 RFU as a true allele for one purpose, or in one case, but not for another? If there are such internal inconsistencies, do they usually inure to the benefit of one side's theory of the case? If so, is that evidence of bias?"
Mr. Bannon's point about consistency of threshold values for peaks is similar to one found in the textbook An Introduction to Forensic DNA analysis, 2nd ed. (Rudin, N. and Inman, K., CRC Press 2002, p. 121) states, “It is important to have some predetermined limit to distinguish what is signal and what is noise.” Without a clear guideline, a scientist may make choices that benefit his or her preferred hypothesis, even subconsciously.
A partial list of authors and references
William Cohan, The Price of Silence, Scribner,
2014. Mr. Cohan is a writer on
business affairs.
Paul Giannelli, “DNA
Profiling” in Race to Injustice
(2009), Michael Siegel, ed.
Paul Giannelli is Albert J.
Weatherhead III and Richard W. Weatherhead Professor of Law at Case Western University
in Ohio. He was the Reporter for
the American Bar Association Criminal Justice Standards on DNA evidence, and he
specializes in the area of scientific evidence. William Thompson explained, "The Reporter for an ABA Standards Group or Study Committee is the person
whose job it is to take down and 'report' the findings, conclusions
and determinations of the group or committee. It is the reporter who prepares the first draft of the
report and of the annotations and notes that accompany a report. The Reporter usually works under the
direction of a committee chair, but has independent responsibility for getting
details right."
Peter Gill, Misleading DNA Evidence, Academic Press,
2014. Peter Gill is Professor of
Forensic Genetics at The University of Oslo, Norway and is a professor at the Norwegian
Institute of Public Health. He is
chair of the DNA commission of the International Society of Forensic Genetics,
and he has published more than 180 peer-reviewed papers.
Georgina Meakin and Alan
Jamieson, “DNA transfer: Review and implications for casework,” Forensic
Science International: Genetics 7 (2013) 434–443. Professor Jamieson is the head of the Forensic Institute in Glasgow,
Scotland.
Joe Minor, “Touch DNA: From the Crime Scene to the Crime
Laboratory,” Forensic Magazine 4/12/13. Joe
Minor teaches forensic science and is a forensic DNA consultant.
Suzanna Ryan “Touch DNA Analysis: Using The Literature To
Help Answer Some Common Questions.”
Forensic Magazine. Suzanna Ryan is a
contributor to law enforcement and forensic magazines, and she is a consultant
and expert witness.
Stuart Taylor and KC Johnson,
Until Proven Innocent, St. Martin’s
Press, 2007.
KC Johnson hosted Durham in Wonderland, a blog that was a major source of information related to the case. Stuart Taylor is a freelance journalist and a contributing
editor for the National Journal, specializing in law. He is a nonresident fellow of the Brookings Institution.
William Thompson, Painting
the target around the matching profile: the Texas sharpshooter fallacy in forensic
DNA interpretation.” Law, Probability and Risk (2009) 8, 257-276.
William
Thompson, “Tarnish on the Gold Standard.”
William Thompson is a professor in the Department of Criminology, Law
and Society at the University of California, Irvine. His areas of expertise include forensics and human judgment
and decision-making.
Van Oorshot R.A.,
Ballantyne, K.N., and Mitchell, R.J.
“Forensic trace DNA: a
review. Investigative Genetics 1
(2010) 1:14. doi: 10.1186/2041-2223-1-14.
Roland Van Oorshot is a member of the Forensic Services Department of
the Victoria Police, Victoria, Australia.
Kenneth Williams “An
Examination of the District Attorney’s Alleged Unethical Conduct,” in Race
to Injustice (2009), Michael Siegel, ed. Kenneth Williams is a member of the
faculty of the South Texas College of Law in Houston, TX.