So you don't believe there could actually be a science or a skill that can't be boiled down into 25 words or less?
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Yep. That would indeed be the case. The range of behaviors also cannot be boiled down into 25 words or less. At least I don't have that skill.
Where did I give you a limitation as to how many words you could use?
If all the skills and knowledge one had as a professional with decades of experience could be written up on little notecards, who would need a college education and experience? We could just pass out the note cards.
So in other words you're dodging because you can't provide the evidence, got it.
You're not convinced one can get a substance on one's hands and then spread it by touching something else?
How do you think germs are transferred to and from hands? It happens all the time and the amount of material we are talking about here is the same quantity.
Because shed skin cells are exactly the same as living bacteria.
Also, I wasn't talking about primary transfer. I was talking about secondary transfer and higher, which appears to be the mechanism that you are suggesting.
You really aren't helping your case here. You don't appear to have made any effort whatsoever to read the links I posted.
I have, but I was asking about you. You as in Skeptic Ginger, in this sense I could read everything written on the subject but I still wouldn't know what combination of techniques you use.
I'm not going to bother with this line of the discussion since clearly how you determine what people feel etc. is some form of trade secret.
The first thing we need is the baseline itself.
So to determine the baseline (which is what I asked) you need to determine the baseline?
That is what the FBI paper touched on. Their focus, however, was just establishing one could determine who had worn clothing by the analysis method.
It also allows the determination of who came in contact with those clothes. I say that because the article doesn't tell us if they discriminated between the inside and the outside of the clothes when they processed, or mixed them in together and processed them.
They established the fact the major donor of the DNA (meaning the larger amount found) was likely to be the person who had worn the clothes.
Which is logical.
But in looking at the major DNA donors, the researchers didn't get into the problem that the minor DNA contributors would pose analyzing minute amounts of DNA from a crime scene.
Technically the major donor is the one who wore the clothes the most. They ever order it like that on table 1. The people who came in contact with those clothes are the minor contributors.
The paper, however, makes that obvious. Clothing new from a factory, sealed in plastic contained DNA from an unknown person who handled it before it went to the store.
Which made that person a minor contributor. And it showed that a person who came in contact with the clothing left enough DNA to be analysed.
The person in the clothes factory most likely picked up the clothing at some point leaving their DNA on the clothes.
If it turns out you have no corroborating evidence except the 'touch' DNA, then you can't say it means anything.
Actually if it is touch DNA then that means that a person came into contact with the thing that you got the DNA from.
Think about it. The more DNA profiles that are added to the data base, all one needs is some poor sop with no alibi who handed a kid an ice cream cone at the mall and you have the same problem as you have with false eyewitness convictions.
Are you analysing the cone or the kid's hand?
And in the Ramsey case, a dirty doorknob JBR put her hands on the night of the murder could be evidence falsely exonerating the parents.
Depends on where on her hands they got the DNA from. What I understand is that the DNA came from under her fingernails. If that is indeed true then you would have to explain how that DNA got under her fingernails.
Yes. The amount was so small it wasn't detected in the initial crime scene evaluation. It wasn't until 2006 when the new technique was used to find minute amounts of DNA that the unknown male DNA was found. There was some DNA in the initial analysis that was too degraded or too small in quantity to be identified.
I was asking about the actual numbers, you know like 1ng, 2ng etc. But thanks for that information nonetheless.
I don't see a difference in this question and the problem of establishing the meaning of finding 'touch' DNA quantities on anything at a crime scene.
As I understand it touch DNA is an instance of primary transfer. So you're going to find touch DNA on well, places which people can touch.
My question is more "if person A shakes hands with person B who shakes hands with person C who then stabs person D with a knife, what are the chances of finding person A's DNA on the knife handle?"
Magical stats? How about just scientifically based significance?
They can already do that. "It can be shown to 95% confidence that the person came in contact with the object."
