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1,000 Errors in Fingerprint Matching Every Year

 
 
Reply Wed 28 Sep, 2005 02:51 am
The Real Crime: 1,000 Errors in Fingerprint Matching Every Year
By LiveScience Staff

posted: 13 September 2005
02:28 pm ET


Nobody knows how many people sit wrongfully convicted in prison due to errors in fingerprint matching. But a new study suggests there could be a thousand or more unknown identification errors a year in the United States.

Criminologist Simon Cole of the University of California at Irvine examined all 22 known cases of fingerprint mistakes made since 1920.

Most of the 22 cases were revealed only through "extremely fortuitous circumstances," such as a post-conviction DNA test, the intervention of foreign police and in one case a deadly lab accident that led to the re-evaluation of evidence, Cole said today.

One highly publicized example was the case of Brandon Mayfield, a Portland lawyer held for two weeks as a suspect in the Madrid train bombings in 2004. FBI investigators matched prints at the scene to Mayfield, and an independent examiner verified the match. But Spanish National Police examiners insisted the prints did not match Mayfield and eventually identified another man who matched the prints.

The FBI acknowledged the error and Mayfield was released.

Cole thinks the high-profile cases are the tip of an iceberg of wrongfully accused, cases that are sometimes swept under the rug or lead to convictions. Other studies have shown an error rate of 0.8 percent in matching prints. Multiplied across all cases processed by U.S. crime labs in 2002, that would b e 1,900 mistaken fingerprint matches.

Cole says the public is led to believe that fingerprint analysis is infallible.

"Rather than blindly insisting there is zero error in fingerprint matching, we should acknowledge the obvious, study the errors openly and find constructive ways to prevent faulty evidence from being used to convict innocent people," Cole said.

His study is detailed in the current issue of the Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology.

http://www.livescience.com/othernews/050913_fingerprint_mistakes.html
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Merry Andrew
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Sep, 2005 03:21 am
I understand that, as a result of this study, some jurisdictions are already phasing out fingerprints as admissible evidence in court in criminal cases. Heard something to that effect on the radio the other day but wasn't paying enough attention to give you any details now.
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Don1
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Oct, 2005 11:37 am
Fingerprint evidence has been proved to be absolute bullshit, read this account of Scottish policewoman Shirley McKie.

DNA evidence has already proved to be a complete load of bollocks and the potential biggest creator of miscarriage of justice the world will ever see.

It isn't the science that is wrong, it is the incompetant people who are in charge of it that makes it the laughing stock that it is.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/panorama/1429484.stm
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goodfielder
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Oct, 2005 08:46 pm
Does anyone know how many points of similarity are required in UK courts? And in state courts in the US how many are required (if there's a common number of course, it might vary from state to state).
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