Machiavelli
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2010
- Messages
- 5,844
It wouldn't be explainable if it was genuine, hence Raffaele's problems making sense of it in his notorious diary entry. But the narrative of it being the murder weapon doesn't make any more sense.
The reading was a false one. There never was any of Meredith's DNA on this knife. Stefanoni could have gone to your house (or any house she chose), picked up one of your kitchen knives and obtained the same result by the methods she used. If evidence like this is to be accepted, then nobody is safe from false accusation and imprisonment.
I really don't think so.
It was an improperly conducted test, run in unsuitable conditions. Why is that so hard for you to understand?
I think the test was properly conducted. The concept of zero error doesn't exist in practical laboratory activity, thus any finding has an intrinsic error occurrence. I don't take any laboratory result as ontologic truth. But the likeliness of false result is always very, very small compared to the likeliness of correct result, and this doesn't depend on "standard" procedures. Such standards are only repetitions of processes, verification iters. They don't change the inherent likeliness of the result. They don't make contamination or mistakes more probable. They mainly check whehter there were mistakes or odd results.
An unrepeated DNA finding is unckecked. More corroboration is required. But nevertheless it is a result. Thus you can keep in your mind a mental reserve and doubt this result was a false positive. I do not think it is reasonable to assume that a series of results and findings were all false positives.