In light of the FBI’s acknowl­edge­ment in April that flawed foren­sic tes­ti­mo­ny by its expert hair-com­par­i­son ana­lysts had taint­ed at least 268 cas­es, includ­ing 32 death penal­ty cas­es, foren­sic sci­ence is com­ing under increased scruti­ny. A com­men­tary in the Boston Review argues that mount­ing hor­ror sto­ries,” includ­ing instances of crime-lab cor­rup­tion and dys­func­tion, have cre­at­ed a moment of cri­sis in foren­sic sci­ence.” Referencing scores of indi­vid­ual cas­es in which foren­sic sci­ence fail­ures have led to wrong­ful con­vic­tions” and high­light­ing the wrong­ful exe­cu­tion of Cameron Todd Willingham in Texas based upon sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly invalid arson tes­ti­mo­ny, the com­men­tary ques­tions the con­tin­ued high degree of con­fi­dence accord­ed foren­sic sci­ence tes­ti­mo­ny in the courts. A 2009 report by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) sharply cri­tiqued many of the tech­niques used by foren­sic exam­in­ers, say­ing, Many foren­sic tests — such as those used to infer the source of tool marks or bite marks — have nev­er been exposed to strin­gent sci­en­tif­ic scruti­ny.” Even wide­ly-accept­ed prac­tices like fin­ger­print match­ing had no mech­a­nism for inde­pen­dent con­fir­ma­tion, rely­ing entire­ly on the exam­in­er’s opin­ion. Ultimately, the NAS report con­clud­ed, With the excep­tion of nuclear DNA analy­sis … no foren­sic method has been rig­or­ous­ly shown to have the capac­i­ty to con­sis­tent­ly, and with a high degree of cer­tain­ty, demon­strate a con­nec­tion between evi­dence and a spe­cif­ic indi­vid­ual or source.” Yet even DNA evi­dence can be taint­ed by faulty prac­tices or inten­tion­al malfea­sance. Close affil­i­a­tions between foren­sic lab­o­ra­to­ries and police or pros­e­cu­tors raise con­cerns of bias. As for­mer FBI inves­ti­ga­tor Frederic Whitehurst put it, foren­sic sci­en­tists can run into a sledge­ham­mer” when their find­ings con­tra­dict the the­o­ry that pros­e­cu­tors are try­ing to advance.

(N. Robinson, Forensic Pseudoscience,” Boston Review, November 16, 2015.) See Innocence.

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