With forensic science facing mounting scrutiny as it plays
an increasingly prominent role in the administration of justice, six scientists
who recently served on the National Commission on Forensic Science are calling
on the scientific community at large to advocate for increased research and financial
support of forensic science as well as the introduction of empirical testing
requirements to ensure the validity of outcomes, reported Phys.org.
"Forensic reform is challenging because the field of
law is based on historical precedent, whereas science builds on itself to
advance continuously," says Thomas Albright, professor and director of
Salk's Vision Center Laboratory who has studied why eyewitnesses fail.
"But if the ultimate goal of a legal system is to deliver justice, then
forensic evidence should be based on up-to-date methods that have been
scientifically validated."
Since the 1990s, when DNA exonerations revealed problems
with some forensic disciplines, various groups have been calling for reform.
This led to a landmark 2009 report by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS)
that found many forensic practices were highly subjective and paved the way for
the 2013 establishment of the National Commission on Forensic Science to
examine such practices. A number of independent scientists served on the
commission, along with forensic scientists, attorneys, judges and law
enforcement personnel, from 2013 to 2017 when the Department of Justice
declined to renew its charter.
Six of the independent scientists—Albright, Suzanne Bell of
the University of West Virginia; Sunita Sah of Cornell University; S. James
Gates, Jr., of Brown University; M. Bonner Benton of the University of Arizona
and Arturo Casadevall of Johns Hopkins University—write in the new paper that
the complex methodologies of forensic science, which
range from DNA analysis to pattern recognition to chemical composition, must be
subjected to scientific testing rather than relying on historical precedent.
They cite the example of bite-mark identification, which has been
scientifically discredited and has resulted in false convictions, but continues
to be accepted in U.S. courts due to precedent.
"In many forensic procedures, such as fingerprint or
footprint or bullet matching, decisions about the similarity of visual patterns
are made by people—and people make mistakes," says Albright, who holds the
Conrad T. Prebys Chair in Vision Science. In 2017, Albright published a paper
in PNAS about an NAS study on eyewitness testimony that described why
identification errors occur and how they can be prevented. "We encourage
the scientific
community to welcome forensic scientists into
their ranks to help identify the causes of forensic failures, predict when they
might occur and lend support to developing strategies to mitigate or prevent
them," says Albright.
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