STORY: "DNA in the dock: how flawed techniques send innocent people to prison," by reporter Nicola Davis, published by The Guardian on October 2, 2017.
GIST: "Many juries believe crime-scene DNA evidence is watertight – but this
is far from the case. As forensic technology gets ever more
sophisticated, experts are only just realising how difficult
interpreting the evidence can be." For
David Butler, it began with a knock on the door early one November
morning, seven years ago. When he opened it, officers from the
Merseyside police were standing on his doorstep. The retired taxi driver
was being arrested for murder. The police said they had evidence connecting Butler to the death of
Anne Marie Foy, a 46-year-old sex worker who had been battered and
strangled in Liverpool in 2005. Butler’s DNA, it turned out, had been logged into the UK national
database after a 1998 investigation into a break-in at the home he
shared with his mother. A partial match had been made to DNA found on
Foy’s fingernail clippings and cardigan buttons. This, combined with
CCTV evidence of a distinctive taxi seen near the scene, led the
prosecutor to tell the jury in Butler’s trial
that the DNA information “provides compelling evidence that the
defendant was in contact with Anne Marie Foy at the time immediately
before she died”. The case seemed conclusive. Yet Butler was adamant: he had not met Foy. “You do see an assumption being made that a DNA profile is evidence
of contact – case closed – whereas it is actually a lot more complicated
than that,” says Ruth Morgan, the director of the Centre for the
Forensic Sciences at University College London. “We are only beginning
to realise quite how complex it is.” Since DNA was first used in a police investigation 31 years ago, to
solve the murder of Dawn Ashworth, a 15-year-old schoolgirl who was
raped and strangled in Leicestershire, the technique has attained an
aura of being bulletproof. Certainly, in some cases, evidence of a DNA
match to a suspect can be powerful. “There will be times when you get a
really clear [DNA] profile, and it is very clear how that material got
to the crime scene. And it is [also] very clear that it was during the
course of an illegal activity,” says Morgan. “The classic [example]
would be semen on the clothing of someone who is underage.” But
Butler’s case is just one of many that highlight growing questions in
the world of forensic science: what exactly are fingermarks, DNA or
gunshot residue actually evidence of – particularly now that even tiny
traces can be detected? It’s a riddle whose answer may have profound consequences. According to research published
by Morgan and her colleagues, rulings for 218 successful appeal cases
in England and Wales between 2010 and 2016 argued that DNA evidence had
been misleading, with the main issues being its relevance, validity or
usefulness in proving an important point in a trial. It is not the first time forensic science has come under scrutiny. In 2015, the FBI and co-authors released a report
that put the final nail in the coffin of hair analysis, while the
matching of fingermarks (found at crime scenes) and fingerprints (taken
from suspects) has also been in the spotlight. In a seminal paper
from 2005, the neuroscientist Itiel Dror and colleagues revealed that,
in the case of ambiguous marks, those examining the evidence could be
swayed in their conclusions by the context of a case, with a match more
likely to be made when the crime had been depicted as harrowing. After initial resistance, the impact of such work has been
dramatic. “Fingermarks are now presented in court in a completely
different way – it is really, really rare that you get someone saying
unequivocally: ‘This is an identification,’” says Morgan. But
with technology now allowing the recovery of minute traces of DNA, new
challenges have arisen. Not only is it often unclear whether trace DNA
is from skin cells, saliva or some other body fluid, but such DNA
samples often contain material from multiple individuals, which is
difficult to tease apart. What’s more, working out when the DNA was deposited, and for
how long it might have been present, is an enormous problem. “If you
get a mixed profile on an item of clothing, is the major profile the
last person who wore it, or is it somebody who regularly wore it?”
Morgan asks. And it gets more complicated. “In different scenarios, some
people leave DNA and some people don’t,” she says. Indeed, studies from
several groups have looked at a number of factors affecting how much DNA
is left behind, which can be influenced by such things as how long it
was since somebody washed their hands and which hand a person touched an
object with. And some people simply shed more. “We’ve had some
experiments where the person whose DNA we were looking for left either a
partial profile or not really a viable profile – but there was other
DNA [from a person] who we were able to identify as a close partner who
hadn’t touched the item; they hadn’t been in the lab.” To Butler, such issues proved pivotal. The DNA samples from
Foy’s nails were a complex mixture of profiles and only a partial match
was found with Butler’s DNA. Further analysis of the initial examination
notes also revealed that Foy had been wearing glittery nail varnish.
“That is going to retain more DNA for a longer time because there is
more opportunity; more things for it to stick to,” says Sue Pope, a DNA
expert who worked on the case, and is now co-director of Principal
Forensic Services Ltd. And there was another significant factor: Butler had a
condition which led to him having flaky skin. “He was depositing a lot
more cells that you might expect from a single touch,” says Pope. The
findings, argued the defence, meant that Butler’s DNA could have found
its way on to Foy’s hands and hence her clothing by entirely innocent
means – for example by Foy handling coins that had previously been
touched by Butler. After eight months on remand, Butler was acquitted. The case exemplifies the puzzles Morgan and her colleagues
are hoping to tackle by means of a host of experiments, from looking at
how DNA can be transferred between individuals to how long particles
such as quartz grains can cling to footwear – an important consideration
given that the shape and texture of such grains can be linked to
specific environments. “One poor student had to wear the same pair of
shoes most days for four months,” says Morgan. The results were intriguing. The outsides of the shoes
showed a rise in particular types of quartz grain as the student visited
each of five known locations, with the quantity of each type dropping
off over time. At the end of the study, grains from just two locations
were found on each shoe. But there was a surprise. “Inside [the shoe] we had every
single location,” said Morgan. That, counterintuitively, means the
inside of a pair of shoes could offer up more clues than the outside
when it comes to tracing a suspect’s movements. Meanwhile, research by the team carried out after the Rotherham abuse scandal
not only revealed that DNA from semen could be found on clothes
laundered several months after the fluid was deposited, but also threw
up another result. “We found the ‘suspect’s’ DNA on other items that had
never had any of that bodily fluid on them, indicating you are getting
transfer in a washing machine,” says Morgan. The question of how and when DNA can be transferred, and its
implications for the justice system, was thrown into sharp relief by
the murder of Meredith Kercher
in November 2007. Among the evidence was the fact that DNA from
Raffaele Sollecito – the boyfriend of Kercher’s flatmate, Amanda Knox –
was found on the clasp of Kercher’s bra. While it was argued that the DNA cropped up as a result of contamination,
Morgan points out that when people are under the same roof there are
multiple opportunities for transfer, from handling each other’s laundry
to touching the same objects. Yet just how much DNA is transferred, and
in what circumstances, remains unknown. The upshot is that, although the technology is more powerful
than ever, the presence of trace DNA is far from a magic bullet.
Indeed, the 2015 annual report from the UK government’s chief scientific
adviser into forensic science warned that for many substances now
detectable at trace levels “our ability to analyse may outstrip our ability to interpret”. But funding, says Morgan, is largely directed towards
inventing new gadgets and miniaturising existing technology, adding that
UCL has had to turn to crowdfunding to raise money for a centre dedicated to the interpretation of forensic evidence. Georgina Meakin, an expert in DNA analysis, also based at
UCL, says that public understanding is another thing lagging behind
advances in technology. One potential area of confusion is just what DNA
analysis involves. Rather than sequencing the whole genome, only
certain areas of the DNA are examined. Since 2014, in England, it has
generally been at 16 sites, plus an additional marker that indicates
whether the sample is from a man or woman. “These [sites] consist of
repeating sequences of DNA, and we are interested in the number of
repeats that are present; it is the number of those repeats that can
differ between individuals,” says Meakin. But, she stresses, trace DNA is often far from conclusive,
with analysts often having to turn to statisticians to unpick mixed
profiles. It’s a situation that some have sought to commercialise, among
them Cybergenetics –
the company behind an algorithm-based technology known as TrueAllele
which claims to be able to untangle mixed profiles and “produce accurate
results on previously unsolvable DNA evidence”. It has been used in hundreds of cases in the US. But there is a hitch: experts have argued that neither they, nor the defendants, have been allowed access
to the system’s source code – meaning, among other things, that it is
difficult to know what assumptions are built into the technology. “There
is a lot of concern,” says Morgan. “People aren’t happy that it is
essentially a black box.” But
the company puts the case that both defence and prosecution are welcome
to test the software on their own data, adding that the maths behind
the system has been disclosed. Nonetheless, Pope argues that independent validation of
software for DNA analysis is crucial. “A courtroom setting is not the
best place for looking at really detailed questions about how statistics
have been done.” And, even if the technology is accepted as being
reliable, questions remain. It “tells you something about the potential
source of the DNA, but nothing at all about the activity involved in the
DNA coming to be where it was found”, she says. That became apparent in the case of the Massereene barracks
murders – the shooting of two British soldiers in Antrim, Northern
Ireland, in March 2009. Among the evidence were findings from
TrueAllele, which included a match between mixed-profile DNA taken from a
mobile phone found in the partly burnt-out getaway car and one of the
suspects, Brian Shivers. As Mark Perlin, founder of TrueAllele,
testified, the DNA on the phone was six billion times more likely to be that of Shivers than it being a coincidence. Killer breakthrough – the day DNA evidence first nailed a murderer. Together with other DNA evidence, the finding proved pivotal in the outcome of the trial. Shivers was found guilty and sentenced to at least 25 years in jail, with his poor health making it likely he would die in prison. Yet in 2013, there was a retrial. The reasoning hung not on
the evidence, but on its interpretation. Shivers’ DNA, the judge
concluded, might have turned up on the phone and on other evidence from
an innocent touch, or even a handshake. “Have the prosecution eliminated other possibilities than
the guilt of the accused? Am I satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of the
guilt of the accused?” he asked. The answer was clear. No. Shivers was acquitted."
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/oct/02/dna-in-the-dock-how-flawed-techniques-send-innocent-people-to-prison
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/c harlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot. com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog -award-nominations.html Please
send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest
to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com. Harold Levy;
Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/oct/02/dna-in-the-dock-how-flawed-techniques-send-innocent-people-to-prison
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/c