If somebody wants to do a bit of Sleuthing they might look into who this Dr F bloke is. Does he have any relevant qualifications at all? Has he ever appeared in court? (Giving evidence as an Expert Wittness, or in a more central role?). Is he even real?
I don't know about qualifications, number of Expert Appearances in court but was on NG in September giving opinion.
Aired September 5, 2008 - 20:00:00 ET
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0809/05/ng.01.html
Below taken From NG Transcripts
GRACE: Let`s go to -- now, that`s a first. I`m going to an expert on this subject, when none of us are. To Jeff Flowers. He is chemical and technical director of Flowers Chemical Laboratories, joining us out of Orlando. Jeff, explain, would a -- just a nose test by a human detect chloroform in the car trunk?
JEFF FLOWERS, CHEMIST, FLOWERS CHEMICAL LABORATORIES: Probably not. These tests were conducted probably using gas chromatography analysis. So no noses were involved.
GRACE: Explain to me -- when you say how significant this is that the air, even the air in the car trunk was saturated with chloroform, what does that mean and why is that so significant to you?
FLOWERS: Well, chloroform is a very volatile chemical, but it is a liquid at room temperature. However, in a car trunk, it`s going to be sealed. It`s going to be not exactly air-tight, but it`s going to be close. And it would be retained on the surfaces of the rug and so forth that`s in the trunk.
GRACE: The fact that the air was saturated, what does that mean to you, evidentiary?
FLOWERS: The question that it brings up -- I mean, chloroform, of course, is an anesthetic. But it also acts -- it`s much more dense than air. So if a child was placed in the trunk and the room -- and the trunk sealed and it was saturated with chloroform from the rag that was used, there would be no oxygen at the bottom of the trunk.
GRACE: I don`t know what that means. You`re speaking to a layperson. As far as proving a case at trial, what does it mean the air was saturated with chloroform, even the air...
FLOWERS: It would be difficult to breathe in the trunk.
GRACE: OK. OK. How much chloroform would it take to cause the air in the car trunk to be saturated with chloroform?
FLOWERS: The liquid chloroform that would be present on the rag would be -- would continue to release itself as a vapor, and that would continue to push away the oxygen from the bottom.