Volume 56, Issue 5 pp. 1180-1184
PAPER
JURISPRUDENCE

Forensic Identification Science Evidence Since Daubert: Part I—A Quantitative Analysis of the Exclusion of Forensic Identification Science Evidence

Mark Page B.D.Sc.(Hons), Grad.Dip.Clin.Dent., G.C.Ed.

Mark Page B.D.Sc.(Hons), Grad.Dip.Clin.Dent., G.C.Ed.

University of Newcastle, School of Health Sciences, PO Box 127, Ourimbah, NSW 2258, Australia.

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Jane Taylor B.D.S., B.Sc.Dent., M.D.Sc., Ph.D.

Jane Taylor B.D.S., B.Sc.Dent., M.D.Sc., Ph.D.

University of Newcastle, School of Health Sciences, PO Box 127, Ourimbah, NSW 2258, Australia.

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Matt Blenkin B.D.Sc., M.Sc.Dent.

Matt Blenkin B.D.Sc., M.Sc.Dent.

University of Newcastle, School of Health Sciences, PO Box 127, Ourimbah, NSW 2258, Australia.

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First published: 19 April 2011
Citations: 23
Additional information and reprint requests:
Mark Page, B.D.Sc., Grad.Dip.Clin.Dent., G.C.Ed.
Oral Health
University of Newcastle
PO Box 127
Ourimbah
NSW 2258
Australia
E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Abstract: The U.S. Supreme Court decisions in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Kumho Tire Co. Ltd. v. Carmichael transformed the way scientific expert evidence was reviewed in courts across the United States. To gauge the impact of these rulings on the admission of forensic identification evidence, the authors analyzed 548 judicial opinions from cases where admission of such evidence was challenged. Eighty-one cases (15%) involved exclusion or limitation of identification evidence, with 50 (65.7%) of these failing to meet the “reliability” threshold. This was largely because of a failure to demonstrate a sufficient scientific foundation for either the technique (27 cases) or the expert’s conclusions (17 cases). The incidence of exclusion/limitation because of a lack of demonstrable reliability suggests that there is a continuing need for the forensic sciences to pursue research validating their underlying theories and techniques of identification to ensure their continued acceptance by the courts.

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