In June, the National Institute of Justice released the results of a study to deter­mine how often mod­ern DNA test­ing of evi­dence from old­er cas­es con­firms the orig­i­nal con­vic­tion. The study, con­duct­ed by the Urban Institute in Washington, D.C, test­ed DNA evi­dence that had been retained in homi­cide and sex­u­al assault con­vic­tions that occurred between 1973 and 1987 in Virginia. Among the homi­cides, there were not enough cas­es in which DNA would be deter­mi­na­tive of guilt to make sta­tis­ti­cal­ly reli­able con­clu­sions about mis­takes. In cas­es of sex­u­al assault, DNA test­ing revealed that in 8 – 15% of the con­vic­tions, the con­vict­ed offend­ers were elim­i­nat­ed as the source of ques­tioned evi­dence and that elim­i­na­tion was sup­port­ive of an exon­er­a­tion. The report con­clud­ed, Even our most con­ser­v­a­tive esti­mate sug­gests that 8 per­cent (or more) of sex­u­al assault con­vic­tions in a 15-year peri­od may have been wrong­ful. That means hun­dreds, if not more than a thou­sand, con­vict­ed offend­ers may have been wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed. That also means hun­dreds (if not more) vic­tims have not received the just result, as pre­vi­ous­ly believed. Therefore, whether the true rate of poten­tial wrong­ful con­vic­tion is 8 per­cent or 15 per­cent in sex­u­al assaults in Virginia between 1973 and 1987 is not as impor­tant as the find­ing that these results require a strong and coor­di­nat­ed policy response.”

Researchers found that DNA test­ing in two-thirds of the cas­es yield­ed inde­ter­mi­nate” results, mean­ing the test was not suf­fi­cient to deter­mine if the DNA came from the con­vict­ed indi­vid­ual. Researchers also not­ed that there might be oth­er evi­dence, not in the foren­sic file of the case, that could still point to the guilt of the defen­dant, though they con­clud­ed this would be rel­a­tive­ly rare.”

(J. Roman, K. Walsh, et al., Post-Conviction DNA Testing and Wrongful Conviction,” Urban Institute Justice Policy Center, June 2012; post­ed by DPIC July 2, 2012). See Innocence. Listen to DPIC’s pod­cast on Innocence.

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