BobTheDonkey
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2009
- Messages
- 4,501
You haven't seen the fsa files, so how can you be sure?
*eyeroll*
So you're saying there was not enough information for Dr Johnson to write the letter?
You haven't seen the fsa files, so how can you be sure?
Link?
*eyeroll*
So you're saying there was not enough information for Dr Johnson to write the letter?
*eyeroll*
So you're saying there was not enough information for Dr Johnson to write the letter?
Assuming the .FSA files are necessary for the proponent to show the validity of the DNA results, and they were not released, then your argument here is invalid.
The fsa files of the controls could be examined for contamination. The fsa files of the evidence samples may show weak peaks, as I documented today with respect to the Leskie case. However, anyone who looks at the DNA profile from the knife blade can see the problems associated with it. The open letter from nine DNA forensic scientists lays out the issues clearly and objectively. So the answer to your question is "No."
You tell me. You seem to be insinuating that the place was not properly sealed and that intruders entered between the initial inspections following the crime and 18 December 2007 (a part from any authorised access, if any).
So, there isn't enough information available to Dr Johnson for her to conclusively state the DNA evidence is invalid?
From your comments here, I cannot believe that you have ever read the open letter, or watched the videos pertaining to the collection of the bra clasp. The answer to your question is again "No," as it has been for the last 100+ pages every time you asked it.
If I had access to the fsa files, the first thing I would do is check to see whether Stefanoni used the same peak threshold for all of the other samples as she used for the knife sample. It is doubtful that she did, because the threshold in the knife experiment was below the manufacturer's preset limit.
So then, by your own admission, the conclusions of the open letter are crap.
(I've read the letter and I've watched the video)
So, there isn't enough information available to Dr Johnson for her to conclusively state the DNA evidence is invalid?
I am wholly at a loss to understand how you could so completely misstate my position. The conclusions of the open letter are one of the few worthwhile things in 150 pages of a thread that has had its fair share of crap. Bob, I would urge you to take a fresh look at what you have written. I have documented that the FSA files are important, adding several orders of magnitude of certainty to the conclusion that contamination occurred in the Leskie case, for example. Then the failure to release them to the defense means that the defendants are being tried on the basis of evidence that they cannot see, and therefore cannot challenge properly. Does this not strike you as wrong?
.Do you think maybe some DNA could have been spread around on those gloves?
.I think the official story is that nobody set foot inside the place between Nov. 3 and Dec. 18 ... And, as you can see here, many people believe everything they say.
Kermit writes:
You tell me. You seem to be insinuating that the place was not properly sealed and that intruders entered between the initial inspections following the crime and 18 December 2007 (a part from any authorised access, if any).
I don't think "intruders," got in. It was cops. They ransacked the place. Look at the gloves in the picture I linked. Do you think maybe some DNA could have been spread around on those gloves?
.my summary of the letter is: The evidence that has been released is dubious.