Chris_Halkides
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2009
- Messages
- 12,572
no easy answers with DNA
shuttit and bobc,
I am a little pressed for time, but I can answer one or two things. There is no way to determine from the amount of DNA or anything else, when or how (primary transfer, secondary transfer, contamination, etc.) how DNA came to be on a piece of evidence. The fact that alleles attributed to Raffaele and to others are small enough to be in the low template range means that the sample should be retested on the basis of alleles possibly dropping in or out, before conclusions are drawn. It also should be tested in a lab that is specially equipped for this kind of work. The fact that this is a mixture raises additional complications (see my comment earlier today). The largest peak of the unattributed alleles is probably larger than the smallest peak of the alleles attributed to Sollecito.
Any knife would be compatible with one of the three wounds. The kitchen knife is too big to have made one or both (depending on one's point of view) of the two other major wounds. It does not match the bloody outline of a knife on the sheets.
I don't see that being in or outside the LCN range is the best way of categorizing this. LCN is obviously related to testing techniques. Presumably some judgement can be made, based on the quantity involved, as to the likelihood of it having come from direct contact?
shuttit and bobc,
I am a little pressed for time, but I can answer one or two things. There is no way to determine from the amount of DNA or anything else, when or how (primary transfer, secondary transfer, contamination, etc.) how DNA came to be on a piece of evidence. The fact that alleles attributed to Raffaele and to others are small enough to be in the low template range means that the sample should be retested on the basis of alleles possibly dropping in or out, before conclusions are drawn. It also should be tested in a lab that is specially equipped for this kind of work. The fact that this is a mixture raises additional complications (see my comment earlier today). The largest peak of the unattributed alleles is probably larger than the smallest peak of the alleles attributed to Sollecito.
Any knife would be compatible with one of the three wounds. The kitchen knife is too big to have made one or both (depending on one's point of view) of the two other major wounds. It does not match the bloody outline of a knife on the sheets.