Reader Ad Slot
Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.
Amerithrax — Part 13
Page 179
179 / 189
USNews.com: The CS] effect: On TV, it's all slam-dunk evidence and quick convictions. Now jur... Page 1 of 3
wv advertisement
sone}
=
CURRENT ISSUE | RANKINGS & GUIDES | BUSINESS | HEALTH | TECH | WASHINGTON WHISPERS | COLUMNS | EDUCATION | CAREER -
ALL INFORMATION CONTAINED
Home > Culture HEREIN IS UNCLASSIFIED
4/25/05
The CSI Effect
(Page 6 of 6)
Other forensic tests are even more open to interpretation. Everything from fingerprint
identification to fiber analysis is now coming under fire. And rightly so. The science is inexact, the
experts are of no uniform opinion, and defense lawyers are increasingly skeptical. Fingerprint
examiners, for instance, still peer through magnifying glasses to read faint ridges.
w udverlseniont Many of these techniques and theories have
never been empirically tested to ensure they
"Mike called3and Said the - 7 are valid. During much of the past decade,
oe prover, . . coroners have certified the deaths of children
guysoare all going to his _| who might have fallen down steps or been
house.oSee you later.” accidentally dropped as "shaken baby
roll over _| homicides because of the presence of retinal
hemorrhages--blood spots--in their eyes.
Juries bought it. Noting that new research
casts grave doubt on the theory, Joseph
Davis, the retired director of Florida's Miami-
Dade County Medical Examiner's Office and
one of the nation's leading forensics experts,
compares proponents of shaken-baby
syndrome to "flat Earthers" and says its use
as a prosecution tool conjures up "shades of
Salem witchcraft" trials.
Are you getting the whole story?
The list goes on. Ear prints, left behind when
>» Linking life and, um, art ‘ a suspect presses his ear to a window, have
been allowed as evidence in court, despite the
fact that there have been no studies to verify that all ears are different or to certify the way ear
prints are taken. The fingerprint match, once considered unimpeachable evidence, is only now
being closely scrutinized. The National Institute of Justice offered grants to kick-start the process
this year. Other "experts" have pushed lip-print analysis, bite-mark analysis, and handwriting
analysis with degrees of certainty that just don't exist, critics say.
Microscopic hair analysis was a staple of prosecutions until just a few years ago and was
accorded an unhealthy degree of certitude. "Hair comparisons have been discredited almost
uniformly in court," says Peterson of the University of Illinois-Chicago. "There are many instances
where science has not come up to the legal needs," adds James Starrs, professor of forensic
sciences and law at George Washington University. Everyone, including the jury, wants certainty.
But it seldom exists in forensics. So the expert, says Starrs, “always needs to leave the possibility
of error." .
MORE._ONLINE
http:/Avww.usnews.com/usnews/djfre/articles/050425/25csi_6.htm @
DATE lLe-l10-2008 BY 60324 UC BalyRs/ Lac
advertisement
;%
4
5/40/2005
Community corrections
No user corrections yet.
Comments
No comments on this document yet.
Bottom Reader Ad Slot
Bottom Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.
Continue Exploring
Reader
Topic
Agency Collection
Explore This Archive Cluster
Broad Topic Hub
Topic Hub
investigation
Related subtopics
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic