Houston Chronicle

Progress squandered in forensic science

- By Rush D. Holt and Jed S. Rakoff

Imagine this: A cop pulls you over and arrests you because you match the descriptio­n of someone wanted for a heinous crime. You are innocent, but after being charged and brought to trial, you watch as experts testify with “scientific certainty” that hair and footprints at the scene match your own, and you are led from the courtroom in shackles.

This may seem like a scene straight out of a TV melodrama, but this scenario happens in real life far too often. A number of forensic techniques — including hair- and footprint-matching, mark analysis, bloodstain-pattern analysis and others — lack scientific validity and reliabilit­y yet are used frequently in our nation’s courtrooms.

According to the National Registry of Exoneratio­ns, no fewer than 490 people have been exonerated since 1989 after being convicted on the basis of false or misleading forensic techniques, including at least 151 in Texas alone.

Just last month, a Michigan man was freed from jail 41 years after his conviction after prosecutor­s agreed that evidence against him — based on an analysis of a single hair — didn’t meet FBI standards.

Another Michigan man was released in May after 25 years in prison following a faulty conviction based on bullets matched to a gun.

During the past decade, thanks largely to a 2009 report from the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), we have made important progress in ridding our nation’s courtrooms of such scenarios. But the Justice Department’s recent decision to not renew the National Commission on Forensic Science — the primary forum through which scientists, forensic lab technician­s, lawyers and judges have worked together to guide the future of forensic science — threatens to stall and even reverse that progress.

The NAS report found that too few forensic discipline­s, other than DNA analysis, have adequate scientific basis. The report also found that experts often overstate their claims in testimony, invoking unscientif­ic terms like “scientific certainty” and claiming 100 percent accuracy.

The Justice Department is the responsibl­e agency for prosecutin­g federal crimes and, in this role, makes frequent use of forensic techniques. It is therefore not appropriat­e for the Justice Department to be the evaluator of forensic practices.

In the 2009 report, the NAS strongly recommende­d that to avoid a conflict of interest, an entity independen­t of the Justice Department should oversee forensic standards.

While the Justice Department did not fully embrace this recommenda­tion, it went ahead and, in collaborat­ion with the National Institute of Standards and Technology, helped create the National Commission on Forensic Science.

From 2013 until earlier this year, the commission provided a venue for all of the relevant stakeholde­rs to discuss issues facing forensic labs and foundation­al science and to advance a path forward to strengthen forensic practices and research.

By building consensus among these diverse groups who all care deeply about the integrity of our justice system, the commission promoted important reforms, such as mandatory accreditat­ion of crime labs used by the government and the immediate disclosure to defense counsels of a government forensic expert’s entire file relating to a defendant. Many of the commission’s recommenda­tions have been adopted not only by the Justice Department but also by state and local crime labs.

They have also resulted in changes both to prosecutor­ial practices and to codes of profession­al conduct for those working in forensic laboratori­es. With these improvemen­ts in providing justice, it is not time to pull back from the forensic commission.

More than 250 individual­s and groups, including leading legal scholars and scientific organizati­ons such as the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science, recently submitted public comments to the Justice Department on how to proceed on forensic science. The overwhelmi­ng majority of comments urged the department to ensure that there be an independen­t and transparen­t oversight body for forensic science like the now-suspended commission.

For now, the Justice Department has taken the opposite view, that there is no conflict with having internal department evaluators oversee forensic science research that their prosecutor­s hope to use in the courtroom.

We urge the attorney general and the department to take a thorough look at the many thoughtful comments from concerned citizens and quickly reconsider this approach.

Forensic science requires conflict-free independen­t evaluation if it is to advance the truth. People’s lives and our society’s faith in the American justice system are at stake.

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