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It wasn't even on her body, it was on her clothing.
Your theory is far fetched. They wore gloves the WHOLE time except to touch just this one tiny minuscule portion of JBR's clothing? Hmm.
ITA. Here is another view of staging and TDNA
In no way do I mean the following imaginary tale to be disrespectful towards anyone holding differing views of TDNA or staging. (I do respect the IDI viewpoint, just doesnt work for me.) This is all simply for the purpose of illustrating why TDNA may not be a smoking gun for any RDIs. No disrespect to New Jersey either. Heres the fantasy crime:
A New Jersey man, coming back late from visiting his mistress, hits and kills a bicyclist He panics and makes a decision to abandon his car, a little Camry, across the tracks. He leaves his wallet on the floor of the driver side, with a few bucks and 1 credit card. He leaves a nifty little camera on the passenger side seat, leaves the car open and a window partway down and walks home 4 miles, arriving at about midnight.
In the meantime a teenager out visiting a friend spots the car, sees the camera and opens up the car. He sees the wallet on the floor of the car, removes the credit card, but tosses that in a garbage can (too risky to use).
While that theft is occuring the man gets home, climbs in bed and in the next early morning hours calls and reports his car stolen. He then calls the credit card company and cancels that card.
The police find the car, dust it for fingerprints, find some TDNA on the driver seat and front passenger seat, fingerprints on the passenger side door, belonging to no one identified in any database. And, TDNA in the backseat too. Five or six samples of it.
One little thing, there had been a fast moving storm and many leaves were blown onto the sidewalks and onto the driveway, sometime between 1:00 and 2:00am. The police see no evidence a car was ever parked there. Yet, there is all kinds of TDNA in that car. They also run a credit card check and find out that the man had only cancelled one credit card. They suspect, in spite of the TDNA, that the man may be involved in a hit and run. With no eye-witnesses to this crime, the police only have the man and his wifes interview to corroborate his whereabouts. Rotten luck, the police are never able to interview the couple separately because the wife is on major anti-depressants dealing with the issue of the mistress.
However, this is New Jersey, very smart police force. They make a decision not to pursue the guy, but to leave it as a cold case. They do not exonerate him on the basis of the TDNA.
Far-fetched example? Depends on ones perspective.