Here we present an Italian criminal case that shows how statistical methods can be used to extract information from a series of mixed DNA profiles. The case involves several different individuals and a set of different DNA traces. The case possibly involves persons of interest of a small population of Romani origin. First, a brief description of the case is provided. Secondly, we introduce some heuristic tools that can be used to evaluate the data and we also briefly outline the statistical model used for analysing DNA mixtures. Finally, we illustrate some of the findings on the case and discuss further directions of research. The results show how the use of different population database allele frequencies for analysing the DNA mixtures can lead to very different results, some seemingly inculpatory and some seemingly exculpatory. We also illustrate the results obtained from combining the evidence from different samples.
Dotto, F., Mortera, J., Baldassarri, L., Pascali, V. L., Analysis of a DNA mixture involving Romani reference populations, <<FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL: GENETICS>>, 2020; January 2020 (44): 102168-102176. [doi:10.1016/j.fsigen.2019.102168] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/151488]
Analysis of a DNA mixture involving Romani reference populations
Baldassarri, Laura;Pascali, Vincenzo Lorenzo
2020
Abstract
Here we present an Italian criminal case that shows how statistical methods can be used to extract information from a series of mixed DNA profiles. The case involves several different individuals and a set of different DNA traces. The case possibly involves persons of interest of a small population of Romani origin. First, a brief description of the case is provided. Secondly, we introduce some heuristic tools that can be used to evaluate the data and we also briefly outline the statistical model used for analysing DNA mixtures. Finally, we illustrate some of the findings on the case and discuss further directions of research. The results show how the use of different population database allele frequencies for analysing the DNA mixtures can lead to very different results, some seemingly inculpatory and some seemingly exculpatory. We also illustrate the results obtained from combining the evidence from different samples.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.