Chris_Halkides
Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2011
- Messages
- 610
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- 17
No, you misunderstand. Conti and Vecchiotti took several swabs of the knife. The one taken exactly where Stefanoni took 36B was negative. The swab taken near where the handle meets the blade yielded what appears to be a low template sample attributable to Ms. Knox (if the news reports are accurate). Conti and Vecchiotti did not amplify this in 2011, after all parties agreed not to proceed.So what you're saying is that #1 scenario is, Conti and Vecchiotti did not find DNA on the knife and #2 scenario is, even if they did, it's probably due to contamination and thus can't be taken into consideration?
Can't have it both ways!
The question that is of the greatest present debate is Stefanoni's 36B. Both contamination and secondary/tertiary transfer are reasonable given the lack of blood and the fact that the testing was not done in a dedicated low template DNA profiling facility.