CBI finds DNA scientist manipulated data

Any accredited lab would have to have blind testing. Almost certainly a bar-coding system for sample labeling and inventory at intake as part of a LIMS (laboratory information management system). It sounds a bit like some are picturing Joe Cop walking into to see his buddy in the lab with a bloody shirt and some strands of hair he secretly picked off his suspects hair brush and saying "there's an extra $100 in it for you if the DNA from these two match". Don't think of CSI as a documentary.
 
Proper handwriting analysis is sound science, not pseudo science!

I don't know if I'd call it science as much as I'd call it helpful if done correctly.

I mean, I had one where they were arguing my guy's signature was on a check. So they made the guy try his best to duplicate the signature on the check and then testified they were a match. The WV crime lab could get a little out of pocket.

I filed a Daubert motion and tortured the guy for two hours on the stand and got him to say any manner of stupid crap about scientific principles. I'd still be there if the judge wouldn't have shut it down. I was doing a lot of Fred Zain habeas cases at the time and I had a lot of trouble when I drove through South Charleston to not pee on their building so getting a free shot to torture someone from the crime lab made my week. Plus he had a BA in sociology from Marshall during the time they were whining about having a better football team than WVU so there was that.

But yeah, given a decent sample in size and quality and it can be useful. It's just harder to jam through a conviction it you do it above board.
 
faking the extraction blanks

In a Jan-Febn 2006 article "Tarnish on the Gold Standard" in The Champion Professor William C. Thompson wrote, "The surprise for defense lawyers who have managed to gain access to these [corrective action] files is how voluminous they are. Errors occur regularly. Files from Orchid- Cellmark’s Germantown, Maryland facility, for example, show dozens of instances in which samples were contam- inated with foreign DNA or DNA was somehow transferred from one sample to another during testing. I recently reviewed the corrective action file for an accredited California laboratory operat- ed by the District Attorney’s Office of Kern County (Bakersfield). Although this is a relatively small laboratory that processes a low volume of samples (probably fewer than 1,000 per year), during an 18-month period, it documented multiple instances in which (blank) control samples were positive for DNA, an instance in which a mother’s reference sample was contaminated with DNA from her child, several instances in which samples were accidentally switched or mislabeled, an instance in which an analyst’s DNA contaminated samples, an instance in which DNA extracted from two different samples was accidentally combined into the same tube, falsely creating a mixed sample, and an instance in which a suspect tested twice did not match himself (probably due to another sample-labeling error)."

Professor Thompson went on to write, "Given the unexpectedly high frequency of contamination in DNA test- ing we have just discussed, it is interest- ing, and not at all surprising, that the major form of fakery discovered to date involves control samples known as extraction blanks that are designed to detect contamination." I am posting this because it may be that the analyst in question falsified negative controls (at least that is my suspicion based on the news stories). I would be surprised if that is all that she did wrong.
 
Last edited:
Hunter's hair?

CNN reported: "But 10 months after the crime, new evidence of a hair was introduced into the case as evidence, and used to indict Hunter for the same crimes, according to the lawsuit. “There is no verification or record of collection of this hair from the crime scene by the Crime Scene Investigation Unit,” the suit noted. Hunter was ultimately convicted on the charges based on the hair evidence, which was examined and tested by Woods, the lawsuit says."

From the CNN article and the one linked below, I received the impression that she took a reference hair and treated it as if it were a questioned sample. In attempting to look into the Hunter case, I found this:

"Still, Colorado officials haven’t said much about what exactly is under review. And they have withheld from the public the 94-page internal affairs investigative report into Woods done by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, much to the consternation of the defense bar and even some prosecutors who have so far unsuccessfully pushed to make the report public...In federal court filings, lawyers representing the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, Jefferson County prosecutors and Lakewood police have resisted Hunter’s efforts to allow new DNA analysis of evidence collected from the crime scene, including the rape kit. They’ve also objected to Hunter’s efforts to have crime scene fingerprints submitted to the national Automated Fingerprint Identification System for comparison against convicted sex offenders."

A bit of a tangent: Fingerprint databases are presently an underutilized resource in overturning wrongful convictions because so few states have laws that support post-conviction fingerprint searching.
 
Last edited:
microscopic hair analysis and mitochondrial DNA

From the Denver Gazette: "Hunter’s lawyers point to discrepancies in crime scene hair analysis by Woods, including her microscopic analysis that misidentified two pubic hairs taken from the victim as matching Hunter’s pubic hairs when DNA testing later determined those hairs really were the victim’s."

A published study of the microscopic examination of hairs followed by mitochondrial DNA profiling indicated that microscopic hair analysis provided few if any false negatives but plenty of false positives. This makes microscopic hair analysis a good presumptive test but not an acceptable confirmatory test. I would not necessarily fault Ms. Woods for incorrectly matching the hairs unless she failed to state or act upon the caveat above. I am not clear who initiated the DNA test in the Hunter case. This is a separate matter from the issue of a hair whose provenance is disputed.
 
In a Jan-Febn 2006 article "Tarnish on the Gold Standard" in The Champion Professor William C. Thompson wrote, "The surprise for defense lawyers who have managed to gain access to these [corrective action] files is how voluminous they are. Errors occur regularly. Files from Orchid- Cellmark’s Germantown, Maryland facility, for example, show dozens of instances in which samples were contam- inated with foreign DNA or DNA was somehow transferred from one sample to another during testing. I recently reviewed the corrective action file for an accredited California laboratory operat- ed by the District Attorney’s Office of Kern County (Bakersfield). Although this is a relatively small laboratory that processes a low volume of samples (probably fewer than 1,000 per year), during an 18-month period, it documented multiple instances in which (blank) control samples were positive for DNA, an instance in which a mother’s reference sample was contaminated with DNA from her child, several instances in which samples were accidentally switched or mislabeled, an instance in which an analyst’s DNA contaminated samples, an instance in which DNA extracted from two different samples was accidentally combined into the same tube, falsely creating a mixed sample, and an instance in which a suspect tested twice did not match himself (probably due to another sample-labeling error)."

Professor Thompson went on to write, "Given the unexpectedly high frequency of contamination in DNA test- ing we have just discussed, it is interest- ing, and not at all surprising, that the major form of fakery discovered to date involves control samples known as extraction blanks that are designed to detect contamination." I am posting this because it may be that the analyst in question falsified negative controls (at least that is my suspicion based on the news stories). I would be surprised if that is all that she did wrong.

You should cross post this in the Knox thread!
 
CBS News reported, "Yvonne "Missy" Woods, 64, has been charged with over 100 separate charges related to forgery, perjury, attempting to influence a public servant, and cybercrime. She'll be tried in Jefferson County Court and was booked into the Jefferson County Jail on a $50,000 bond Tuesday, court records show...According to a 35-page arrest affidavit, Woods would intentionally leave DNA samples out of tests or reports or sometimes test samples until the results showed the results she wanted."
 

Back
Top Bottom