This is JREF, what it is about is exposing bad and bogus science. Lawyers are not scientists, the court can rule that the sun goes round the earth, that does not make it true.
True. But we
are talking about a case of law. Typically experts witnesses are called and their testimony is weighed and tested, as appears happened here.
Much of the 'science' presented by the scientific police is bogus. GIGO IMHO.
Fixed that for you.
Take one example: "Knife has DNA from suspect on handle.
No innocent explanation for how this came to be"
May I suggest that using the knife to slice bread is an innocent explanation for how Knox DNA was on the handle of the bread knife!
Which is good as far as it goes. But there was part of the argument that somehow got left out in your editing.
What is scientifically impossible is that the knife was so thoroughly cleaned that the haemoglobin (remember 30 billion times more haemoglobin than DNA), was entirely removed, but the DNA on the handle remains!
Which is an interesting claim. Was the haemoglogin
entirely removed, or sufficient to be too low to be detected by ordinary tests? Isn't there a threshold?
There is no way the DNA of Knox on the handle means anything other than she used it to slice bread. Whatever a judge with no knowledge of DNA may think; it means nowt.
Fortunately, the judges had the expert testimony of forensic scientists to consider.
Without following the correct methodology we really do not know what the output of the machine means. We have a profile that matches Kercher. We do not know that this matches the DNA in the sample run through the machine. At these very low levels of DNA you can get random output.
So this allegedly 'random output' just happens to
coincidentally be a match for the victim's DNA profile. What are the odds for that?
As has been repeatedly said the sample should have been split into at least two and the profile can only be accepted if replicated. That only indicates that the sample in the machine contains Kercher DNA. Not where it came from.
Apparently it came from the knife - that's what they were testing.
LCN is so sensitive you have to take special precautions to prevent contamination, people build special laboratories to do this. You have to do laboratory environment sampling as well as the routine assay controls to detect contamination. This is what the experts say and do. This is what the standards say.
That may be so. However, it would seem even more 'scientifically impossible' for random noise to match a particular person's DNA than for some cells containing DNA to survive an incomplete washing.
As for the allegations of 'contamination' it would seem unlikely that this and only this piece of evidence would be contaminated in this way. We'd expect to get all kinds of random results (like Guede's DNA on the blade and Kercher's DNA on the handle, or Knox's DNA on the blade Sollecito's tactical knife, etc).
Knife found in possession of subject: innocent explanation - it was his bread knife in the kitchen draw.
No one AFAICT is arguing that having a knife in one's home is by itself damning evidence.
Knife consistent with fatal wound; there were no identifying features of this wound that meant it could not have been done with the same knife as all the other wounds; wounds that could not have been inflicted with Sollecito's bread knife.
No one AFAICT is arguing the smaller wounds were made with the large kitchen knife.
Judges are just as susceptible to a smooth talking 'expert' talking nonsense as anyone else. That the 'expert' works for the scientific police does not make nonsense correct.
Yes, there could be 'smooth talking experts' talking nonsense on any side of the case. Which is part of the virtue of an adversarial system.