AK's appeal doc insists that the sensitivity of the TMB test was exhibited in this case when the scientists tested much smaller pictograms from the bathroom that tested positive for blood than the ones in the footprints, which tested negative.
The relief in question is even more significant when comparing the quantitative data of luminol positive samples with the "weight" of artifacts taken from the bath side the victim's room. In the latter case, are found to amount biological traces also significantly less than the amount found in luminol positive samples. Yet the tetrametilbenzina test was positive, confirming the reliability and sensitivity of the investigation in question.
I have no idea where this is in the appeal because I extracted the whole luminol portion and put it into google translator. I then just saved it to a word doc to read later (which coincidentally is now.) --actually, this might be around page 5, I figured out.
OMGoodess, the rest of this is hard to follow. Can someone else figure out what they mean here?
That is observed, for example, the trace 180. The documentation of findings shows the shape of a foot in the room of Amanda Knox, and instead, while Since the important quantity of DNA (240 picograms), it is found the positive blood or the genetic profile of Meredith Kercher. And it is precisely this last finding, as already anticipated, the most significant possible that at those tracks there was blood. Only three cases have been found from the biological Meredith Kercher, while many 121 traces gave birth to nothing genetic, others were found belong to Amanda Knox. It 's more than legitimate to ask, then, how you can say that it is presence of blood, since the genetic investigations have excluded this nature, but especially in view of the ground that at the luminol positive samples was not recovered from the biological Meredith Kercher. Consultants Knox defense had argued that the intense luminescence track was fair with a large quantity of material with the reagent luminol. Concluded, therefore, the nature of blood traces in considering the question of the biological profile of Meredith Kercher (Technical Report, signed by Prof. Tower, p. 4).. Prof. Torre reiterated in debates
<<with this luminescence is hard to believe that it would not be pulled out of DNA is a strong luminescence, the first should have been maybe make a specific diagnosis of blood>> (July 6, 2009 hearing transcript, page 28).. It 'just the case to highlight how the Court itself has said-about genetic investigations on the knife-the possibility of obtaining DNA from a single cell. Well, the non-discovery of the biological profile of the victim proves that the tracks in question did not contain blood of the victim.