1 / 16

Physical Evidence

Physical Evidence. DNA. video projects no deals.wmv ...wrongful...earl washington.wmv ...earl washington.wav ...dnakathleen ham.wmv ...samantha runnion.wmv ...what is DNA.wmv ...dna contamined.wmv ...larry peterson.wmv cold case.wmv, cold hit.wmv dnahpd crime lab.wmv.

lala
Download Presentation

Physical Evidence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physical Evidence DNA \video projects\ no deals.wmv ...\wrongful...\earl washington.wmv...earl washington.wav...\dna\kathleen ham.wmv...\samantha runnion.wmv...\what is DNA.wmv...\dna contamined.wmv...\larry peterson.wmv\cold case.wmv, \cold hit.wmv\dna\hpd crime lab.wmv

  2. Murder of husband and mother of Federal judge • On Feb. 28, 2005 the husband and mother ofFederal judge Joan Lefkow were found shot todeath in the Lefkow’s Chicago home • Suspicion was immediately placed on right-wingmilitants against whom Lefkow had ruled on a civillawsuit. A huge investigation got under way. • Three days later a West Allis, Wisconsin patrol officer pulled over Bart Ross for suspicious activities. • Ross, an unemployed electrician and cancer victim, committed suicide. • In Ross’s car was a note in which he confessed to the shootings. He was angry at Judge Lefkow for dismissing his civil lawsuit against medical providers. • Ross’s DNA was matched against DNA left on a cigarette butt left behind in the Lefkow residence.

  3. DNA in Girl's Tears Pointto Killer, D.A. Says AP, 3/21/2005 According to the prosecutor, DNA fromSamantha Runnion’s tears wasfound in an inside door of the vehicleused by her killer, Alejandro Avila.More DNA material was found onthe vehicle’s center console and inscrapings from the victim’s fingernails. Samantha was kidnapped inJuly 2002 while playing in front of herhome with a friend. Her body was found the next day. She had been sexually assaulted and suffocated. In an unrelated case, Avila was acquitted in 2001 of molesting two other girls. On 4/28/2005 Avila was convicted of Samantha’s murder and was sentenced to death.

  4. Court Views Chilling Video of SerialKiller in Action L.A. Times 10/31/05 During a preliminary hearing LAPD showed a videotape of a“husky muscular man forcing a woman onto the ground, rapingand strangling her.” Chester D. Turner, 38, is accused ofstrangling ten women between 1987 and 1998, a period in whichhe was bouncing around between prison, half-way houses andrelatives’ homes. He is suspected in as many as twenty murders, Chester Turnercommitted during a period in which L.A. averaged 1,000 homicides a year. The trail leading to Turner began in February 1998, with the discovery of the body of Paula Vance, 38, who was raped and strangled. In September 2003 LAPD lab analysts extracted DNA from biological samples obtained from Vance’s body. The DNA profile was uploaded to California’s statewide DNA database, which contains prisoner DNA profiles. A match was made to Turner’s DNA profile. A nearby security camera recorded the crime. Although the image is indistinct, the assailant resembles Turner. Additional DNA matches were later made between Turner and biological samples from other victims. These resulted in freeing of David Allen Jones, a mentally-retarded man who served 11 years after being convicted on two of the murders.

  5. Thirty-two years late,justice is served In 1973, Kathleen Ham, 58, aCalifornia lawyer, was rapedwhile living in New York city.The trial of her allegedassailant, Fletcher Worrell,ended in a hung jury. Months later Worrell wasconvicted in another rape and sentencedto prison. After his release Worrell stayed in trouble with the law and eventually left the country. He later returned. In 2004 Worrell tried to buy a shotgun. The background check turned up two sexual assault warrants and Worrell was arrested. Now 59, Worrell has been linked through DNA to 24 other rapes in New Jersey and Maryland.

  6. First a new trial, then freedom On July 29, 2005, the murder andrape conviction of Larry LeroyPeterson were thrown out afterDNA results on hairs and othersamples ruled out Peterson asthe donor. But prosecutorsremained convinced thatthat Peterson was guiltybecause he allegedly told severalpersons that he committed thecrimes. In 2006 prosecutors decided not to retry the case. Peterson was originally convicted based on a microscopic hair comparison and testimony of three men who said he confessed to them. But when these men were re-interviewed their stories changed; one suggested he was coached by police. Prosecutors decided to drop the case because they did not feel they had enough evidence to convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.

  7. DNA – what is it? • Molecules that carry genetic information specific for each person • Present in tissue, hair, bodily secretions (e.g., sweat) and fluids (e.g., blood, urine, saliva) • Arranged in two strands that spiral • Each strand contains a sequence of “bases”, the chemicals Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine and Thymine • Bases are bound across strands, but only in these “base pairs”: ATG C Libraryvideo.com The only difference between people is in the sequence of these “base pairs”

  8. DNA analysis Mom Dad Child • Complete DNA strands bearing a person’s full DNA sequence are present in the nucleus of every cell • Full sequence of base pairs fully identifies a particular person. Can’t be used to make a match (there are too many base pairs in someone’s DNA!) • Each person inherits repetitive sequences of 20-100 base pairs (VNTR, variable number tandem repeats). These occur at certain locations in each person’s DNA strands and can be matched. • A lab typically looks at 13 places. The lab counts the number of repeats in each of the 13 places, and the overall pattern is a person's DNA profile. In fact, each place can yield two numbers, because people inherit DNA from both parents, and the number of repeats inherited from each parent usually differs. • If the DNA profiles from two samples match, it's considered virtually certain that both samples came from the same person or identical twins.

  9. Types of DNA • Nuclear: DNA from a cell’s nucleus. It has the complete DNA sequence and has been accepted in Court as positive ID. • Mitochondrial: from a cell, outside the nucleus. Present in much greater quantity than nuclear DNA but carries only part of the DNA sequence. • Cannot be used as positive ID but can rule persons out as a source • No general rule allowing its use in Court • Used in Scott Peterson trial: One hair found in his boat was linked to his mother-in-law (both share a DNA sequence that is present in 1 out of 112 Caucasians). • Approved for use in the Samantha Runnion kidnap/murder case • YSTR: from the “Y” chromosome, found only in males. • Cannot be used as positive ID • Useful in sex assaults when female DNA obscures other DNA sequences. • First application in California in the Samantha Runnion case.

  10. Matching known toquestioned DNA • Compare known DNA, usually anexcellent sample taken on purpose toquestioned DNA from a scene, oftendegraded and incomplete • Results can be a match, elimination orinconclusive • One dissimilarity (foreign VNTR pattern) eliminates • Probabilities can range from 1 in 20 to less than one in a million • Errors • Degradation through heat, light, moisture, bacteria • Band shifting • Contamination (coughing, sneezing, skin flaking) • False negatives more common (one dissimilarity excludes) • Technical incompetence and carelessness 

  11. Getting DNA “on the sly” --“surreptitious sampling” • 2007 -- Buffalo, NY -- Altemio Sanchez, suspectedserial killer, admitted killing three women, gets lifein prison. His DNA was recovered by detectives whotook a glass that he used in a restaurant • 2006 -- Sacramento, CA -- Rolando Gallego, whohad passed a polygraph, was suspected in amurder that happened 15 years before. Officersfollowed him until he discarded a cigarette butt • 2007 -- Los Angeles -- Adolph Laudenberg,suspected serial killer, invited by police todiscuss an unrelated matter, left his DNA on astyrofoam cup at a doughnut shop

  12. DNA repositories • Many States now require felons to submit DNA samples • DNA typing is expensive • Time-consuming • Requires precision • Must be careful to avoid contamination • Establishing State-wide and National DNA databases has swamped laboratories and created huge backlogs • BUT – repositories have led to many “cold hits”, mostly in sexual assaults

  13. Using partial (familial) “hits”to develop investigative leads • In April 2008 Cal DOJ announced a program to search for partial hits in the state DNA database • As usual, DOJ would compare “questioned” DNA recovered at a scene to “known” DNA profiles in the State database • Normally the State only reports an exact match • In this program, if there is no exact match, the State would ID any persons whose “known” DNA profiles are so close to the submitted, “questioned” DNA that they could be a blood relative • For reasons of privacy, agencies would have to make a special request and provide justification before the State would release the identity of persons whose DNA profile was a close hit • This procedure is used in Great Britain, but at this time California is the only State in the U.S. to institute the practice

  14. Probability that a match can happen at random (meaning, to an innocent person) • Best match -- high a priori (before DNA) probability • A good “questioned” sample from the scene, with repeats present in 10 or more areas, AND • The match was made to a previously ID’d suspect’s “known” DNA • Probability of a random match is often very low -- 1 in 100 million or more • Worst match -- low a priori (before DNA) probability • The questioned sample is degraded, with repeats present in only 7 areas (minimum required in California for a match), AND • The match to “known” DNA was produced by a database run • Probability of a random match depends on the prevalence of the DNA profile AND the size of the database • If the same DNA profile is present in 1 out of every 1,000,000 persons, and the database is contains 1,000,000 profiles (like Calif.) the probability of a match after the whole database is run is 1 in 1. If the population is 38,000,000 and nothing else is known the probability of someone matched being guilty is 1/38. • Database matches most useful when questioned (recovered) DNA is so good that the DNA profile is shared by very few people, or when excellent evidence of guilt is independently developed

  15. Virginia Governor Orders Review of150 DNA Cases by Crime Lab NY Times, 5/7/05 An error in examining the DNA of semen found in a rape victim, whichnearly led to the execution of the wrong person, led Virginia’s governor toorder a complete review of all cases handled by the lab’s director,Jerry Ban. The lab twice failed to identify the donor of the semen found ina victim even though he was a known, convicted serial rapist. With the DNAunidentified, there was nothing to keep Washington from taking the blame. Auditors from the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors sharply criticized the Virginia lab, once thought to be the nation’s finest, for caving in to pressures from the State’s former Governor to quickly solve cases. Earl Washington, Jr.Innocent but nearly executed

  16. Houston PDcrime lab scandal • Major report in June 2007 cited poorprocedures and poorly trained personnel • The lab’s work was called seriously deficientacross the board, casting doubt onthousands of convictions • Poor analyses were found of firearmsevidence, controlled substances, DNA and serology, the science of typing body fluids. • The panel called for a review of 180 cases in which serology was used to determine whether the lab’s findings played major role in securing convictions. So far, serology and DNA errors led to three known wrongful convictions: • Ronald Taylor - failed to find the real perpetrator’s DNA on victim’s bed sheet • Josiah Sutton, exonerated and released from prison in March 2003 when DNA tests challenged the HPD work on a 1998 rape. • George Rodriguez, served more than 17 years in prison in the 1987 rape of a 14-year-old girl before new evidence discredited the HPD findings Investigative panel website Full report Summary

More Related