ScarlettScarpetta
When the going gets tough, drink coffee
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2012
- Messages
- 12,690
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- 180
Or, They will see it was someone they over looked the first time and finally have an answer to this awful crime.
Why even bother to ask? You know you're not going to get any answer, no one ever has before.
That's your choice,doesn't make it true though.
I think I asked a pretty valid question but you always avoid those.
madeleine, I agree. You asked a valid question. It is obvious some opinions are clearly based on overstating until the cows come home that they are here to proclaim Ramsey innocence, not to provide information and theories and evidence supporting or advancing the IDI theory.
Ramsey DNA should be all over the blanket, the long johns, the panties, etc. Small, insignificant amounts of touch DNA from an unknown contributor is, according to some, supposed to point to Ramsey innocence. I think even people who read but don't post here can see things for what they are just as the Grand Jury did.
Of course I think the R's are innocent at this point still.. all this time later.
The DNA that has no match is concerning and until it is matched can not be ruled out.
I am not trying to convince anyone of anything. People believe what they believe. The GJ apparently did not get it right. Of there would have been charges. It really is that simple.
Why do we even have grand juries if people are just going to discard what they vote for as them not getting it right. They spent 13 months seeing the evidence and interviewing people. 12 people saw what the evidence totaled.
Two bombshells from the show
The much vaunted DNA evidence that Mary Lacy, Lin Wood, John Ramsey and some others have shamelessly paraded around would NOT BE ADMISSIBLE in court because it is a mixed profile with dropout.
there is no generally accepted means of attaching a reliable statistical weight to a mixed DNA profile where allelic drop out may have occurred."
Listen at 54:38 58:25
Continuing on with Mary Lacy, Dr Krane said that if she based the exoneration exclusively on the DNA evidence then that was WRONG THAT THAT CONVEYS A LACK OF UNDERSTANDING OF DNA.
Listen at 58:42 61:00
Medical researchers arent the only scientists interested in our multitudes of personal genomes. So are forensic scientists. When they attempt to identify criminals or murder victims by matching DNA, they want to avoid being misled by the variety of genomes inside a single person.
Last year, for example, forensic scientists at the Washington State Patrol Crime Laboratory Division described how a saliva sample and a sperm sample from the same suspect in a sexual assault case didnt match.
Bone marrow transplants can also confound forensic scientists. Researchers at Innsbruck Medical University in Austria took cheek swabs from 77 people who had received transplants up to nine years earlier. In 74 percent of the samples, they found a mix of genomes both their own and those from the marrow donors, the scientists reported this year. The transplanted stem cells hadnt just replaced blood cells, but had also become cells lining the cheek.
Perhaps one day there will actually be a hit in the CODIS database. Perhaps someone will be arrested for some unrelated crime which requires a DNA sample be taken, and BANG! MATCH!! "Where were you on December 25, 1996?"
Then the suspect will be investigated... and it will be found that he/she was living in China at the time and working in a garment factory that made little girls' underwear. :doh:
:takeabow:
Or, working in the laboratory way back in the 90s in Colorado, before you got fired for routinely failing to observe basic cross contamination regulations...:waitasec:
Does anyone know the exact procedure for taking fingernail clippings from the deceased?
They bag the hands. Then does the coroner use a different nail clipper for each nail and put the nail and clipper in a container of some sort? So ten nails and ten clippers.
I have always wondered about this and how it was done. I have not been able to find the exact procedure on the internet.
TIA
Yes, that's the way it should be done.
Not only wasn't it done that way, it was done with dirty clippers that could have been used on other decedent sand the very same clippers for all ten nails.
:bump:
I think this is the thread that talks about what Nom was asking about.