Hi Vic
Hope you had a nice holiday. (not with XL I hope!!)
Re your post #60
The main difference with this case (Simpson) compared to Hanratty as you correctly say is the direct route of contamination.
It is my view, and it has been corroborated by Professor Allan Jamieson that the vast majority of analysts working in criminal DNA analysis are employed by the FSS. It has been difficult (and I hate the term whistleblower) for defence teams in legal cases to obtain genuinely top class expert advice and witnesses as nearly all of them, hitherto, worked for the prosecution.
I believe that this was the case in Hanratty. I mean no detriment to Dr Martin Evison, the appellants expert witness in Hanratty (2002), but was he truly an expert in advanced DNA techniques and the problems involved, at that time? I don't think so. He only set up his RCHI program at the University of Sheffield in 2004.
Dr Evisons page at UCL (University of London, visiting) can be found at;
By the time of the Simpson and Hoey cases (2007) the defence teams could call on Professor Jamieson's Forensic Institute team to give both expert advice and defence witness testimony about LCN DNA.
Whereas in Hoey and Simpson the problems of mixed profiles were exposed, this was not done in Hanratty, although similar mixed profiles must have existed due to the very nature of the technique used.
Consider the DNA profiles of Valerie Storie and Michael Gregsten as mention in the Court of Appeal judgement. How were these obtained? In the case of Valerie Storie that would not be difficult as she is still alive (does anyone have any information as to when this was done?) but how did the FSS obtain a certain profile of Mike's? (any help here? I am sure that someone has mentioned it on here or in the other place). His body was not exhumed to my knowledge.
I was only quoting from newspaper reports on the case. But I assume that because the DNA evidence was all the prosecution had to go on they had to make the most of it. This was reinforced by Dr Whitaker who stuck to his guns and stated that he stood by what he had said. This was, I again assume, part of the CSI effect that DNA seems to have on juries.
I do not have access to the transcript of the Simpson case (yet) but here is what Justice Weir had to say about Dr Whitaker in his judgement in Hoey (2007 paragraph 63 (in full))
Again as with the cost of the DNA analysis, I was only quoting from newspaper reports of the Simpson case. Bearing in mind that the case was not initiated from police investigation but from purely a cold case DNA gamble (match to taxi drivers from the DNA database) it does seem in this case that the gamble was an expensive one. Also this was just the cost of the DNA work, not the whole cost of the case which I cannot find (as yet).
The one thing I would say here is that if DNA evidence is the starting block for initiating an expensive investigation, with all of the expectations of the victims loved ones and anxiety of the accused (and thier loved ones) accrued then I say no.
I cannot help you any further with the internal standards of replication although PCR is the replication/amplification phenomena used in all SGM/LCN/LT techniques. Hope that helps?
Kind regards
Reg
Hope you had a nice holiday. (not with XL I hope!!)
Re your post #60
The main difference with this case (Simpson) compared to Hanratty as you correctly say is the direct route of contamination.
It is my view, and it has been corroborated by Professor Allan Jamieson that the vast majority of analysts working in criminal DNA analysis are employed by the FSS. It has been difficult (and I hate the term whistleblower) for defence teams in legal cases to obtain genuinely top class expert advice and witnesses as nearly all of them, hitherto, worked for the prosecution.
I believe that this was the case in Hanratty. I mean no detriment to Dr Martin Evison, the appellants expert witness in Hanratty (2002), but was he truly an expert in advanced DNA techniques and the problems involved, at that time? I don't think so. He only set up his RCHI program at the University of Sheffield in 2004.
Dr Evisons page at UCL (University of London, visiting) can be found at;
By the time of the Simpson and Hoey cases (2007) the defence teams could call on Professor Jamieson's Forensic Institute team to give both expert advice and defence witness testimony about LCN DNA.
Whereas in Hoey and Simpson the problems of mixed profiles were exposed, this was not done in Hanratty, although similar mixed profiles must have existed due to the very nature of the technique used.
Consider the DNA profiles of Valerie Storie and Michael Gregsten as mention in the Court of Appeal judgement. How were these obtained? In the case of Valerie Storie that would not be difficult as she is still alive (does anyone have any information as to when this was done?) but how did the FSS obtain a certain profile of Mike's? (any help here? I am sure that someone has mentioned it on here or in the other place). His body was not exhumed to my knowledge.
Therefore, why have you exclaimed "The prosecution had stated that the chances of the profile belonging to anyone else other than Mr Simpson was 1 in 40 million!"? I'm convinced that the profile was Simpsons, it's just we know how it got there.
I do not have access to the transcript of the Simpson case (yet) but here is what Justice Weir had to say about Dr Whitaker in his judgement in Hoey (2007 paragraph 63 (in full))
I was concerned about the manner and content of the response of Dr Whitaker to these criticisms. He was most unwilling to accept that the continuing absence of international agreement on validation of LCN (unlike SGM+)or the variations in the way in which it was being implemented in different countries should be any impediment to the ready acceptance by any court of the Birmingham approach. I found him inappropriately combative as an expert witness and his unwillingness to debate constructively the various matters put to him was unhelpful in the extreme. By contrast, his colleague Dr Gill, while understandably concerned to endorse the views of Dr Whitaker where he properly could, was willing to carefully consider the propositions put to him by Mr Pownall QC and, where appropriate, to disagree with his colleague on important issues both general and specific to the case. In my view it was extremely fortunate that the prosecution decided late in the day to call Dr Gill as his evidence greatly helped to inform and bring some objectivity to the debate.
The one thing I would say here is that if DNA evidence is the starting block for initiating an expensive investigation, with all of the expectations of the victims loved ones and anxiety of the accused (and thier loved ones) accrued then I say no.
I cannot help you any further with the internal standards of replication although PCR is the replication/amplification phenomena used in all SGM/LCN/LT techniques. Hope that helps?
Kind regards
Reg
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