Vixen is one of those who can find the hilarity in even the most tragic of murders.
Vixen was asked to name one - one! - peer reviewed forensic-DNA expert who supports Stefanoni's contribution to this case.
In answer to that she cites not Professor Novelli,
but what Judge Nencini had written about Professor Novelli. Please remember that Nencini had already been trashed by the eventual ISC panel which annulled his conviction (without remand) and called Nencini's judicial method of handling DNA evidence wanting.
Wanting: mainly because Judge Nencini misunderstood key judicial renderings of how judges should handle expert evidence. Two misunderstandings which Marasca-Bruno savage Nencini over are:
- elevating himself over experts as a supra-expert acc. to a now antiquated legal method where an Italian judge knows better than the experts.
- not understanding the relationship between "compatibility" and "identity" in DNA profiling, believing that "compatibility" is enough.
But back to the question asked politely of Vixen a gazillion times: name one - one! - peer reviewed forensic-DNA expert who supports Stefanoni's work. For that, Vixen offers one - one! - sentence from Nencini, which even though Nencini's judicial-renderings of this are incompetent - as a now "judicial truth" established by the ISC - even in considering all this, all Nencini can manage is:
- Novelli **confirms** the need for multiple amplifications, which Stefanoni did not do.
- Novelli muses that he suspects, though, that this shortcoming can be overcome by the experience of the operator, without expressing an opinion as to whether or not Stefanoni was that operator!!
That is the best Vixen can do. At least she acknowledged the need that the question was a good one, and had a right to be answered, even as she supplied the weakest answer possible.....
...... meaning that even Vixen now agrees that no peer-reviewed forensic-DNA expert has ever agreed with Stefanoni and her lab's handling of crucial evidence in a horrid murder case.
As for Novelli -- one is left with the view that he would not
outright lie for the prosecution. He confirmed the need for multiple amplifications, while musing that perhaps an experienced operator might overcome that necessary step of protocol......
..... leaving some room for doubt, so that an unscrupulous prosecutor, an idiot judge, and an agenda-laden internet poster many years later might claim he meant otherwise.