Originally posted by phantom
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"The authors say in their paper that the Data Protection Act, a U.K. law designed to protect the privacy of individuals, stops them from publishing the genetic sequences of the living relatives of Eddowes and Kosminski. The graphic in the paper, they say, is easier for nonscientists to understand, especially “those interested in true crime.”
"Walther Parson, a forensic scientist at the Institute of Legal Medicine at Innsbruck Medical University in Austria, says mitochondrial DNA sequences pose no risk to privacy and the authors should have included them in the paper. “Otherwise the reader cannot judge the result. I wonder where science and research are going when we start to avoid showing results but instead present colored boxes." (Emphasis added)
The cynical might point out that the last time Louhelainen's results hit the airwaves, multiple errors were discovered in his report, which led to the relevance of the mDNA match being greatly overestimated and thus misreported in the press. How can we judge the current results are accurate?
Further, if this is published in a forensic science journal, why is Dr. Louhelainen concerned with the readers of "true crime"? Who is the intended audience of this journal?
Does he want it both ways--a paper in a "peer reviewed" scientific journal, but in a format that has been dumbed down for "true crime" enthusiasts? Dr. Parson's concerns seem to be wholly legitimate.
By the way, I've just received an email from a trusted genealogist confirming the identity of the blood donors. I was also informed that the woman's name is Karen Miller, not Kate.
I did a little poking around on my own at ancestry.com and it appears that the mother of David Melville Hayes (the cloth's original owner) can be traced back to Amos Simpson. As you no doubt know, Amos Simpson was the policeman who supposedly "recovered" the shawl/table runner from the crime scene.
But, as already pointed out by many researchers, Amos Simpson was an acting Sergeant in the Met in far-off Cheshunt in 1888, twenty-odd miles from Mitre Square, and so would have played no role in the Eddowes' crime scene, the details of which, at any rate, are well documented.
I realize this joint paper was published in a forensic journal, but the claims were broadcast widely in the media. So, let me just ask. If Dr. Louhelainen is going to dip his toe into historical research, and state as a fact that the shawl was "recovered" by Amos Simpson from a crime scene, do you think a historian should have also played a role in this peer review process? If not, why not? He is making historical claims in the paper as well as scientific ones, is he not?
Thanks
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