I would look around if I were you.Nope. Not alone.
I am mostly puzzled as to why anyone would hold it to be of any value, given the circumstances of its collection, level of degradation and amount of markers.You're trying very hard to eliminate the fingernail DNA evidence but it wont work.
If you are trying to defend it because you believe that there is tissue under her fingernails from scratching the SFF leader, then once again you stand alone in your contention.
Actually the fingernail DNA has been discarded by both IDI and RDI, I guess not SFFDI though.Its ridiculous the lengths RDI will go to in order to eliminate the fingernail DNA evidence.
That’s for sure.Granted it may not be enough to rule somebody in
If they used contaminated, degraded DNA to rule anyone out, I would suggest they begin doing a lot of retesting with the CODIS profile.BPD used the fingernail DNA to compare suspects early on. Thats according to the news.
…but they used it to rule people out.
Like I said earlier, try showing up in court with that.Therefore it is evidence.
Bill Wise, former first assistant with the Boulder County District Attorney's Office, said that although DNA "absolutely could be one of the biggest things in the case," it could also be nothing....and you don't know that it does not belong to the owner of the CODIS DNA.
Some of the DNA taken from the 6-year-old pageant queen's fingernails and underwear was "degraded," Wise said. He said the tool used to take samples wasn't clean.
"It had foreign DNA on it," he said.
The other "minuscule" sample, which is probably blood, was mixed with JonBenet's DNA, he said. That leaves investigators with the daunting task of trying to match a partial DNA strand with a sample from John Karr.
"The amount of DNA is small enough that it could exclude someone. But it could not go so far for the inclusion," Wise said.
http://www.dailycamera.com/archivesearch/ci_13061689