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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-09-09
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<text id=94TT1124>
<title>
Aug. 08, 1994: Justice:Order in the Lab!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 08, 1994 Everybody's Hip (And That's Not Cool)
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
JUSTICE, Page 46
Order in the Lab!
</hdr>
<body>
<p> As the judge sets a date for the Simpson trial, lawyers wrangle
over the DNA tests that could seal O.J.'s fate
</p>
<p>By Leon Jaroff--With reporting by Dan Cray/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> Rising to his feet during a pretrial hearing in the O.J. Simpson
case in Los Angeles last week, Deputy District Attorney William
Hodgman waxed indignant. "If the defense wants to go fishing,"
he complained, "they're going to have to use their own pole
and own tackle box." Hodgman was upset over the defense team's
demands that the prosecutors turn over a laundry list of records
including reports of prowler and burglary calls in the neighborhood
of the murder site, records of local unsolved murders, and--on the chance that Nicole Simpson's dog may have attacked the
killer--records of emergency-room visits for dog bites during
the 24 hours after the slayings. Most intriguing of all was
the defense's demand that prosecutors investigate an unidentified
witness who had reportedly seen two white men leaving the crime
scene. The prosecution insisted, in turn, that it was not ignoring
leads or holding back evidence from the defense.
</p>
<p> If the thrust and parry had a tone of urgency, it was because
both sides were aware that the time to prepare their case was
growing short. As expected, the judge set an early date for
the opening of the trial: Sept. 19. No one could know for sure
whether any more witnesses would turn up before then (Simpson
was offering $500,000 for information that would prove his innocence),
but the case may not turn on what people saw or didn't see.
By the time of the trial, the court will have what is likely
to be the most important evidence: results of DNA tests done
on blood found at the homes of O.J. and Nicole Simpson.
</p>
<p> A hearing earlier in the week centered on that subject and was
notable for some pretrial confessions--confessions of ignorance
about testing, that is. The only kind of science he studied
in college, Judge Lance Ito admitted, was political science,
and both Deputy District Attorney Marcia Clark and defense attorney
Robert Shapiro in effect conceded that they lacked the expertise
to come to his aid. Ito ordered both attorneys to round up expert
witnesses to testify about how to handle and interpret the DNA
tests.
</p>
<p> DNA fingerprinting, as the process is called, is a complex,
high-tech forensic test that can link a suspect to the commission
of a crime--or establish his innocence. While still controversial,
use of the tests is gaining widespread acceptance in American
courtrooms, including California's. That fact was hardly lost
on either the Simpson defense or the prosecution. Attorney Shapiro
insisted that his own experts as well as those hired by the
prosecution had the right to conduct the DNA tests. He requested
that the prosecution turn over half the samples of blood that
were collected by investigators after the slayings.
</p>
<p> After much wrangling, a compromise was reached. The defense's
experts could visit Cellmark Diagnostics in Germantown, Maryland,
where the prosecution had sent the samples for testing, and
could pare off 10% of each sample. But the material removed
would in effect be held in escrow. After hearing expert testimony,
Judge Ito would rule on the disposal of the sliced-off portions.
</p>
<p> The tests being performed in Maryland involve two different
techniques: RFLP (for restriction fragment length polymorphisms)
and a newer process called PCR (polymerase chain reaction).
Both are based on the fact that no two people except for identical
twins have identical DNA.
</p>
<p> The DNA strand found in the nucleus of a human cell contains
a sequence of some 3 billion chemical units, each of them representing
one of the four "letters" in the genetic code. Most of the sequence
is the same in all humans, but there are variations, especially
in the "junk" stretches of between the genes, where seemingly
meaningless triplets of code letters are repeated over and over
again. In some of these stretches, no two people have the same
number of repeats.
</p>
<p> In RFLP tests, which take several weeks, the DNA is extracted
from blood or hair or other tissue samples and exposed to enzymes
that "recognize" certain sequences of code letters and snip
the strand at those sequences, cutting the DNA into fragments
of varying lengths. These segments are placed in a gel and subjected
to an electrical charge that pulls them down into the gel. Because
short pieces move faster than longer ones, the fragments are
separated into a pattern of bands that is recorded on X-ray
film. That pattern differs from person to person, depending
on the number of repeats in each segment, and by comparing the
images on overlying X-ray films, lab technicians can determine
if there is a match between samples.
</p>
<p> Several thousand cells and long stretches of DNA in pristine
condition are required for RFLP tests, and lawyer Shapiro's
concern is that RFLP testing at Cellmark will completely consume
some of the smaller samples. But the prosecution insists that
RFLP tests are essential because they can be so accurate. Scientists
estimate that the chance that a properly conducted RFLP test
will incorrectly identify a person's blood are less than 1 in
a million.
</p>
<p> PCR tests are less precise but require just several days, need
only the DNA from a few dozen cells and, because only short
segments of are needed, can be effective even if the DNA is
somewhat degraded. Using PCR and working with tiny samples,
technicians use enzymes to copy each of these segments time
and again until they have enough DNA for testing. One PCR method
involves comparing the DNA in one of several genes having code-letter
sequences that can vary slightly from person to person. The
chance of this test incorrectly linking a suspect with a forensic
sample is only about 1 in several thousand.
</p>
<p> A newer PCR test developed by Dr. Thomas Caskey, of the Baylor
College of Medicine in Houston, is even more accurate; if there
is a match, the odds that it could have occurred by chance are
about 1 in 100,000. Caskey's technique involves comparing short
triplet repeat sequences in as many as 13 locations in human
DNA, sites in which the number of repeats varies widely among
individuals.
</p>
<p> Like most U.S. prosecutors, Rockne Harmon, a deputy district
attorney in California's Alameda County, has an abiding faith
in the answers that DNA provides. "There has never been a case
in which a person has been convicted using DNA evidence and
later been proven to be innocent," he says. "In fact, people
have actually been freed from prison thanks to DNA evidence
that turned up after they were convicted."
</p>
<p> O.J. Simpson hasn't been convicted, but he sits day after day
in a Los Angeles jail cell. Whether he wins freedom or stays
behind bars may depend on the tale of DNA.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>