christianahannah
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2010
- Messages
- 1,426
Good find! If this is accurate (and I'm sure Ganong would argue that Vogt never gets anything wrong!), then this heavily implies that the 13th November knife test did indeed take place in the very midst of a large number of other tests where Meredith's DNA was present.
The only other (slight) possibility is that Ms Stefanoni decided that the knife was both significant and in need of very sensitive testing, and that she therefore decided to defer the start of the DNA tests in this case until the Tuesday (the 13th), and to make the knife the very first item related to this case to be tested. But if that had been the case, I think it's practically certain that Stefanoni/Comodi would have been very keen to mention this in the 30th July court testimony. And of course Stefanoni would have mentioned it in her original testimony in the first trial: she would have said the knife was tested first, rather than "in the middle" of the 50-60 items.
Therefore, I think we can reasonably conclude that if Vogt's article is accurate, the first test on the knife was almost certainly run on the same day as numerous other tests where Meredith's DNA was present (and present in very large amounts).
I see no record of samples being run on November 13 which contain Meredith's DNA in very large amounts. In fact of the samples which have the same date as the knife there is no DNA from Meredith on those samples. The samples (which I have tried to decipher) are samples collected from Raffaele's apartment on November 6 and run on November 13.
And as far as Stefanoni's testimony, I gathered that she was stating those 50-60 items which tested postive for Meredith's DNA were were run over the course of the testing with the knife neither being the first sample in which her DNA turned up or the last sample.