Chicago tribune

Critics tell experts: Show us the science Series TRIBUNE INVESTIGATIVE 
REPORT: FORENSICS UNDER THE MICROSCOPE; [Chicago Final Edition]

Steve Mills and Flynn McRoberts, Tribune staff reporters. Chicago 
Tribune. Chicago, Ill.: Oct 17, 2004. pg. 18
Abstract (Article Summary)

Though fingerprint experts resisted such study for years, researchers 
are already examining another staple of forensics-- firearm 
identification, the process of matching bullets or casings found at 
crime scenes with bullets fired from suspects' weapons.
Full Text (939   words)
(Copyright 2004 by the Chicago Tribune)

Sidebar.

In exonerating scores of prisoners in recent years, new DNA testing has 
turned an unflattering light on a whole array of forensic evidence. Two 
of the oldest disciplines have responded to the challenge in 
dramatically different ways.

The pressure persuaded researchers to test the validity of bullet- 
matching methods for the first time. But fingerprint examiners, who use 
perhaps the most common forensic tool, have resisted.

Few doubt that fingerprints are unique, but that agreement has obscured 
a troubling reality: No research has been done to answer such questions 
as how much of the partial fingerprints found at crime scenes is needed 
to reliably declare a match.

"The scientific basis may be there for the whole print, but is it there 
for that fragment found on the handle of the attache case or on the 
counter in the kitchen?" said American Academy of Forensic Sciences 
president Ronald Singer.

"Those are the questions that need to be answered with objective 
scientific research, not subjective experience or anecdotal evidence."

But the fingerprint community has balked. "Most of the fingerprint 
people are against that," Singer said, "because they're reluctant to 
open up themselves to the criticism that what they've been doing is 
somehow unscientific."

In light of such questions, the research arm of the Justice Department 
in September 1999 approved a request for studies meant to scientifically 
validate fingerprinting. But then it stalled.

According to senior officials at the National Institute of Justice, the 
head of the FBI lab asked the institute to delay its release until the 
end of a trial in Philadelphia where defense attorneys were arguing 
there was no scientific basis to support fingerprint matches.

Other institute officials contend that funding and a need to clarify the 
language of the proposal led to its delay. In any case, shortly after 
the defendant was convicted in early 2000, the institute released its 
call for research.

The proposal caused such a stir in fingerprinting circles that the 
institute's acting director sent out an unusual clarification, 
backpedaling from any suggestion that fingerprinting was in doubt.

The research, Julie Samuels wrote, was intended only to "further confirm 
the already existing basis" that fingerprints can be used to identify 
individuals, noting what she called "the success of the current procedures."

Yet her own agency had issued an assessment of the state of forensics 
that described the shortcomings of fingerprinting. Such evidence "has 
historically been 'understood' to hold individuality," read the February 
1999 report. "However, the theoretical basis for this individuality has 
had limited study and needs a great deal more work."

The institute's request eventually drew four proposals from researchers, 
including one submitted by a team led by University of Illinois at 
Chicago professor Robert Gaensslen, who heads the university's forensic 
science program.

The Gaensslen team wanted to put fingerprinting on a firmer scientific 
foundation, exploring such basic questions as whether individuals share 
fingerprint characteristics.

The institute returned his proposal for standard revisions, which he 
said he made. Not long after, the call for research died.

But that may be about to change. In an interview last week, the 
institute's current director, Sarah Hart, said an international panel of 
experts will meet in the next couple of weeks to discuss what issues 
ought to be explored in a second call for fingerprint research, which 
could go out by the end of January.

Hart said the new call for research likely would address a central 
unanswered question: Can examiners attach statistical probabilities to 
their declarations that the partial prints found at crime scenes are a 
match. "It's going to give jurors information about the significance and 
weight they should attach to fingerprint testimony," she said.

Though fingerprint experts resisted such study for years, researchers 
are already examining another staple of forensics-- firearm 
identification, the process of matching bullets or casings found at 
crime scenes with bullets fired from suspects' weapons.

The tricky part about firearm identification is that bullets fired from 
the same model of gun will share certain characteristics, while other 
marks will be unique to each gun. The firearm examiner must pinpoint the 
truly distinguishing marks.

At a private lab in Rockville, Md., Benjamin Bachrach and fellow 
researchers are trying to insert some science into that subjective exercise.

"The core of the work that we're doing is to show that ballistics 
matching is not a matter of opinion," said Bachrach, vice president of 
the lab, Intelligent Automation.

Funded by the same agency that withdrew the request for a fingerprint 
study, Bachrach's team is test-firing nine models of 9 mm handguns, one 
of the most commonly used in street crime.

The team already has discovered, for instance, that different brands of 
bullets are imprinted differently, even when they go through the same 
barrel. Whether this matters in the ability to declare accurate 
ballistic matches has yet to be determined.

But Bachrach said he hopes to provide firearm identification experts 
with the research needed to give their testimony more scientific 
precision: estimated error rates in the matching of bullets.

Critics of how forensic science is used want to see the same sort of 
inquiry applied to other disciplines.

"We're saying, 'Show me the work,'" said Lisa Steele, a co-chair of the 
forensic evidence committee of the National Association of Criminal 
Defense Lawyers. "Otherwise, we're taking their word for it. And that's 
not good enough in criminal defense."


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