The introduction of profiling systems with increased sensitivity has led to a concurrent increase in the risk of detecting contaminating DNA in forensic casework. To evaluate the contamination risk of tools used during exhibit examination we have assessed the occurrence and level of DNA transferred between mock casework exhibits, comprised of cotton or glass substrates, and high-risk vectors (scissors, forceps, and gloves). The subsequent impact of such transfer in the profiling of a target sample was also investigated. Dried blood or touch DNA, deposited on the primary substrate, was transferred via the vector to the secondary substrate, which was either DNA-free or contained a target sample (dried blood or touch DNA). Pairwise combination...
Empirical data on the transfer and persistence of trace DNA are crucial to the evaluation of forensi...
Purpose: DNA is a highly valuable lead to identify people who were possibly involved in a crime. Eve...
The sensitivity of forensic DNA typing techniques can cause problems when evidence samples are inadv...
Contamination has always been a problem in DNA analysis testing, but it is becoming a more prominent...
DNA profiling is an extremely useful tool in criminal investigations for the identifications of pers...
Current research has explored some of the variables impacting DNA transfer, prevalence, persistence ...
Contact stains recovered at break-in crime scenes are frequently characterized by mixtures of DNA fr...
The presence of DNA in a criminal investigation often requires scrutiny in relation to how it came t...
In the course of a criminal investigation, DNA is often recovered from items that have been handled ...
The recovery of fingermarks and DNA from the same location at a crime scene can be problematic becau...
Efficient sampling with swabs is crucial for optimal forensic DNA analysis. The DNA recovery is dete...
The sensitivity of modern forensic techniques has drastically increased, with sensitive technology d...
POSSIBILITY OF RELATING SOMEONE WITH A CRIME BY SECONDARY DNA TRANSFERYasemin Soysal1,2, Erdem Özkar...
This research evaluated a potential source of DNA contamination associated with latent print process...
DNA analysis of touch evidence on cartridge cases has proven difficult despite numerous attempts to ...
Empirical data on the transfer and persistence of trace DNA are crucial to the evaluation of forensi...
Purpose: DNA is a highly valuable lead to identify people who were possibly involved in a crime. Eve...
The sensitivity of forensic DNA typing techniques can cause problems when evidence samples are inadv...
Contamination has always been a problem in DNA analysis testing, but it is becoming a more prominent...
DNA profiling is an extremely useful tool in criminal investigations for the identifications of pers...
Current research has explored some of the variables impacting DNA transfer, prevalence, persistence ...
Contact stains recovered at break-in crime scenes are frequently characterized by mixtures of DNA fr...
The presence of DNA in a criminal investigation often requires scrutiny in relation to how it came t...
In the course of a criminal investigation, DNA is often recovered from items that have been handled ...
The recovery of fingermarks and DNA from the same location at a crime scene can be problematic becau...
Efficient sampling with swabs is crucial for optimal forensic DNA analysis. The DNA recovery is dete...
The sensitivity of modern forensic techniques has drastically increased, with sensitive technology d...
POSSIBILITY OF RELATING SOMEONE WITH A CRIME BY SECONDARY DNA TRANSFERYasemin Soysal1,2, Erdem Özkar...
This research evaluated a potential source of DNA contamination associated with latent print process...
DNA analysis of touch evidence on cartridge cases has proven difficult despite numerous attempts to ...
Empirical data on the transfer and persistence of trace DNA are crucial to the evaluation of forensi...
Purpose: DNA is a highly valuable lead to identify people who were possibly involved in a crime. Eve...
The sensitivity of forensic DNA typing techniques can cause problems when evidence samples are inadv...