Already done, the new thread is here.
Kestrel said:In another thread, the assertion was made that dead skin cells don't contain DNA. Based on my knowledge, I can't see any support for this idea. Yet this fact was stated in court by a prosecution expert witness and accepted by the court as true. Rather than drag all the experts into a he said, she said argument about a crime, it seemed better to open a separate thread to discuss this.
Has anyone ever heard this before and is there a scientific basis for this claim?
Already done, the new thread is here.
Kestrel said:In another thread, the assertion was made that dead skin cells don't contain DNA. Based on my knowledge, I can't see any support for this idea. Yet this fact was stated in court by a prosecution expert witness and accepted by the court as true. Rather than drag all the experts into a he said, she said argument about a crime, it seemed better to open a separate thread to discuss this.
Has anyone ever heard this before and is there a scientific basis for this claim?
But this is typical behaviour on their part.Oh come on Kestrel! Be honest with your new audience and put the FULL question to them instead of just half the issue, you left out the 'dust' part. .... I also see you have completely ignored Kermit's post where he quotes the article halides1 posted that makes it absolutely clear, complete DNA profiles cannot yet be extracted be extracted from dust? Clearly, you are continuing your old habit of closing your eyes whenever proof is presented to show your arguments to be false.
You've lost the dust argument already. Move on.
I do remember remember reading that getting dried out damages the DNA. I'm going to try and get a good answer to this question. Given that the judges report is so arse achingly detailed, it will be good to read the fully fleshed out version of this argument.The judge's report actually claims that there can be no DNA in dust, for instance, because dry skin cells do not contain DNA, so the only way DNA can be transferred is through direct contact (or presumably having gotten someone's saliva on your skin, or something!). Even as a non-scientist, this seems like a nonsense to me, since it would imply that transferring DNA from one source to another is a virtual impossibility. They use this argument repeatedly to deny the possibility of contamination.
Oh come on Kestrel! Be honest with your new audience and put the FULL question to them instead of just half the issue, you left out the 'dust' part. Don't you want to tell the new science friends your courting that your real end game is to attempt to establish an individual's full DNA profile, in high volume, appeared on an item of evidence in a murder case?
This is what you wrote in your knew thread:
Oh come on Kestrel! Be honest with your new audience and put the FULL question to them instead of just half the issue, you left out the 'dust' part. Don't you want to tell the new science friends your courting that your real end game is to attempt to establish an individual's full DNA profile, in high volume, appeared on an item of evidence in a murder case?
I also see you have completely ignored Kermit's post where he quotes the article halides1 posted that makes it absolutely clear, complete DNA profiles cannot yet be extracted be extracted from dust? Clearly, you are continuing your old habit of closing your eyes whenever proof is presented to show your arguments to be false.
You've lost the dust argument already. Move on.
It has already been established that dead skin cells contain low quality DNA. It is mostly unusable.
“Common forensics practices can also lead to biasing errors, says Dan Krane, a molecular evolutionist at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. “Forensic scientists tell me that it is easier for them to distinguish between noise and what is really coming from the DNA if they have a reference sample to work with,” he says. Low copy number or not, that reference sample is often the suspect’s DNA — and faint peaks in a crime-scene sample might seem more convincing when viewed side by side with a strong peak from the suspect. Only
a couple of labs in the United States, he says, require blind testing in their protocols.
Critics’ fears are confounded by an unwillingness of the labs that use the technique to reveal their guidelines for interpreting results. Labs should be forced to disclose details, says Budowle. Given the technique’s reproducibility problems, he argues it is imperative that these protocols are robust and reliable. But “none of the labs disclose what they do. They say it is proprietary information,” he says.
[end quote]
First, protocols are not the same thing as fsa files, and nothing in this article suggests that not releasing fsa files is standard practice. Therefore your statement to the effect that the Nature article contradicts Dr. Krane is completely false. Second, Dr. Krane’s comments to Nature about bias are pertinent to the knife DNA profile. Third, you put confidence in Nature as a journal. Then the fact that Nature sought him out as an expert gives even more weight to Dr. Krane’s credentials and comments about the near universal release of the fsa files. It is the same Dr. Krane.
From the same article, “In low-copy-number profiling, forensic scientists generally split their limited amount of DNA into two or three samples and run analyses on two of them. The third, if available, is reserved for the defence. The results of analyses aren’t completely reproducible, profiles often won’t match and the scientists generally accept as true those STR signals that show up in both runs. The practice is worrying, says Budowle: ‘The logic of this approach makes some sense, but the confidence in it has not been assessed.’” (emphasis added) Thus, the knife profile failed to conform to the standards discussed in the Nature article, there being only a single test, not two or three.
Finally, you are confusing blind controls with all controls, but blind controls are only one type of control. Laboratories typically perform negative controls. Dr. Donald Riley wrote, “Alternatively, the blank may show no profile, consistent with, but not proving that contamination didn't occur. Unfortunately, a few forensic DNA laboratories omit their controls…Good PCR technique is no guarantee that contamination didn't influence the results. Steps must be taken to try and detect contamination. Negative controls are blank PCRs that have all the components of the evidentiary PCRs but have no other DNA added intentionally. Fortunately, there are often two negative controls used, one when the DNA is extracted, and another when the PCR is set up. Any PCR signal in the negative control would warn that contamination has occurred. Unfortunately, the negative controls are virtually the only warning of PCR contamination. Negative controls may alert the analyst to general contamination occurring within the lab or the lab reagents.” http://www.scientific.org/tutorials/articles/riley/riley.html
In summary neither your comments about release of fsa files nor your comments about controls are supported by the article you cited.
Chris
- Your comment may be of interest it you erroneously believe that Raffaele's clearly and distinctly identified profile on the bra clasp came from dust.Andy Coughlin in the New Scientist (http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19826584.200-telltale-dna-sucked-out-of-household-dust.html) wrote, “The amount of DNA in dust is tiny and from so many people that singling out any individual could be tricky.” (emphasis added) The key point is that if the dust has contributions from many individuals, the resulting DNA profile will likewise have multiple contributions.
- This is irrelevant. We've already discussed here and on the other thread (backup up by references to technical journals) that a strong DNA profile such as Raffaele's could not have been detected with current techniques in dust contanimation.Kermit, this article in the New Scientist does not say what you think it says. It implies that a mixed sample is hard to analyze, a well-known problem in DNA forensics.
- Maybe there could have been some contamination from minute, partial DNA profiles in dust, but - as pointed out already several times - Raffaele's profile was strong and could not have come dust.the possibility that dust contributed several profiles is supported in the literature and is parsimonious.
You derive a legal conclusion from a blog poster's paraphrasing of a legal document which is being translated.Katy_did (message #5657) wrote, “The judge's report actually claims that there can be no DNA in dust.” Thus, Stefanoni put forth and the judges accepted a scientifically invalid argument.
Fulcanelli,
This is in response to messages #5356 (p. 134) and #5640 (p. 141).
In message #5640 you wrote, “As for Krane, the article in Nature says the opposite about what is the 'norm'. Now, who should I put more stock in...this Krane guy, or one of the most prestigious journals in the world...hmm, that's a tough one.”
In message #5356, you quote Michael at PMF who said, “This has been a recent favourite complaint by certain sections of the FOA who have claimed (without supporting it with evidence I would add) that blind controls were not used in testing the knife.”
From Nature, 464, 18 March 2010:
“Common forensics practices can also lead to biasing errors, says Dan Krane, a molecular evolutionist at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. “Forensic scientists tell me that it is easier for them to distinguish between noise and what is really coming from the DNA if they have a reference sample to work with,” he says. Low copy number or not, that reference sample is often the suspect’s DNA — and faint peaks in a crime-scene sample might seem more convincing when viewed side by side with a strong peak from the suspect. Only
a couple of labs in the United States, he says, require blind testing in their protocols.
Critics’ fears are confounded by an unwillingness of the labs that use the technique to reveal their guidelines for interpreting results. Labs should be forced to disclose details, says Budowle. Given the technique’s reproducibility problems, he argues it is imperative that these protocols are robust and reliable. But “none of the labs disclose what they do. They say it is proprietary information,” he says.
[end quote]
First, protocols are not the same thing as fsa files, and nothing in this article suggests that not releasing fsa files is standard practice. Therefore your statement to the effect that the Nature article contradicts Dr. Krane is completely false. Second, Dr. Krane’s comments to Nature about bias are pertinent to the knife DNA profile. Third, you put confidence in Nature as a journal. Then the fact that Nature sought him out as an expert gives even more weight to Dr. Krane’s credentials and comments about the near universal release of the fsa files. It is the same Dr. Krane.
From the same article, “In low-copy-number profiling, forensic scientists generally split their limited amount of DNA into two or three samples and run analyses on two of them. The third, if available, is reserved for the defence. The results of analyses aren’t completely reproducible, profiles often won’t match and the scientists generally accept as true those STR signals that show up in both runs. The practice is worrying, says Budowle: ‘The logic of this approach makes some sense, but the confidence in it has not been assessed.’” (emphasis added) Thus, the knife profile failed to conform to the standards discussed in the Nature article, there being only a single test, not two or three.
Finally, you are confusing blind controls with all controls, but blind controls are only one type of control. Laboratories typically perform negative controls. Dr. Donald Riley wrote, “Alternatively, the blank may show no profile, consistent with, but not proving that contamination didn't occur. Unfortunately, a few forensic DNA laboratories omit their controls…Good PCR technique is no guarantee that contamination didn't influence the results. Steps must be taken to try and detect contamination. Negative controls are blank PCRs that have all the components of the evidentiary PCRs but have no other DNA added intentionally. Fortunately, there are often two negative controls used, one when the DNA is extracted, and another when the PCR is set up. Any PCR signal in the negative control would warn that contamination has occurred. Unfortunately, the negative controls are virtually the only warning of PCR contamination. Negative controls may alert the analyst to general contamination occurring within the lab or the lab reagents.” http://www.scientific.org/tutorials/articles/riley/riley.html
In summary neither your comments about release of fsa files nor your comments about controls are supported by the article you cited.
Chris
First, you still have not demonstrated that it is standard practice for labs to release .fsa files.
Second, you've yet to establish the .fsa files weren't released to the defence anyway.
Third, it is clear nobody asked the Italian defence lawyers for any .fsa files.
Fourth, you've yet to provide any proof as has been requested from you numerous times. It seems in your world, the police and police scientists have to prove EVERYTHING, but YOU don't, your say so is merely enough.
Here is more information on the release of electronic files.
William C. Thompson. Victoria State Coroner's Inquest into Death of Jaidyn Leskie. DNA report. December 3, 2003.