Khross wrote:
1. The source of the DNA material matched to OBL's sister no longer exists. Consequently, there exists no way to test for a false positive or independently verify the results. You have a one off test from a now destroyed source with DNA material that may or may not have been collected from the body in question. Since you cannot independently verify that DNA testing, it is wholly and completely unacceptable.
If it didn't come from the source in question and yet still matched.. well, I don't see how that would be a problem. The only problem is if it doesn't match. I'm also not sure who would do this independant verification, and without better reason that simply "the situation is fishy" and "the government lies" I see noe reason it's unacceptable. YMMV, but other people's suspicion is not evidence of any misdirection in this case.
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2.
viewtopic.php?p=140800#p140800Just re-read the original post. They don't count because they're no longer useful.
Sorry, but evidence does not ever "not count" unless you're in court where it not counting is a legal fiction. This is not a matter of law.
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Yay! We matched a DNA sample ostensibly taken from a body we no longer have to OBL's Sister's DNA from a sample acquired at Boston General ...
How is that useful? What if you got an outlying result? What if something shows up to dispute that claim that requires further testing to falsify? How do you do that now?
What if indeed? Is there any reason to think any of that is actually the case?
I have acknowledged that there is a
possibility of deception by the government here, but I have not seen anything to convince me the possibility is anything more than that - a possibility of indeterminate, but small, probability. I understand that you are highly suspicious and skeptical of government, but skepticism is not evidence.