_Misleading DNA Evidence: A Guide for Scientists, Judges, and Lawyers_
presents the reasons miscarriages of justice can occur when dealing
with DNA, what the role of the forensic scientist is throughout the
process, and how judges and lawyers can educate themselves about all
of the possibilities to consider when dealing with cases that involve
DNA evidence.
DNA has become the gold standard by which a person can be placed at
the scene of a crime, and the past decade has seen great advances in
this powerful crime solving tool. But the statistics that analysts can
attach to DNA evidence often vary, and in some cases the statistical
weight assigned to that match, can vary enormously. The numbers
provided to juries often overstate the evidence, and can result in a
wrongful conviction. In addition to statistics, the way the evidence
is collected, stored and analyzed can also result in a wrongful
conviction due to contamination.
This book reviews high-profile and somewhat contentious cases to
illustrate these points, including the death of Meredith Kercher. It
examines crucial topics such as characterization of errors and
determination of error rates, reporting DNA profiles and the source
and sub-source levels, and the essentials of statement writing. It is
a concise, readable resource that will help not only scientists, but
legal professionals with limited scientific backgrounds, to understand
the intricacies of DNA use in the justice system.
* Ideal reference for scientists and for those without extensive
scientific backgrounds
* Written by one of the pioneers in forensic DNA typing and
interpretation of DNA profiling results
* Ideal format for travel, court environments, or wherever easy
access to reference material is vital
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780124172142
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Vendor
Academic Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
100
Forfatter