The Michigan Daly - Fr, No 4 '2'? k~u.~4 -,'l 6° s '' '.; t 'a4;. 4 y . v''.-4 . t '4' y= r:.. AUL lFl Am. 9 p S Ao"AL d AF IS M M 'WIN i :. it* h , Uffl & u h 0 M, _-, I" By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter c "' 4.' DNA Double Helix This is a model of the DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid) structure. NA uses four basic proteins to record each person's unique genetic code. This code can be used to identify individuals in criminal investigations. he highly publicized O.J. Simpson double-murder trial is the most closely watched courtroom event in American history, garnering hundreds of hours of TV coverage and reams of newsprint. Whether Simpson is found guilty or innocent will largely be decided by circumstantial evidence. Central to the prosecution's case are blood samples found at the crime scene and in the defendant's vehicle. The blood samples contain DNA, which may play an important role in identifying the perpetrator of the brutal murders of Simpson's ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her male friend, Ronald Goldman. If blood samples collected at the crime scene match samples collected from Simpson, it will cast a shadow of guilt on the defendant that the ex-foot- ball superstar may not be able to shed. But Simpson's lawyers are preparing to challenge any results from DNA testing as being inconclusive and misleading. Closer to home, DNA analysis is playing a pivotal role in a series of rapes in Ann Arbor believed to be committed by one man since February 1992. The suspect has allegedly at- tacked 12 women - brutally raping five and killing one of his victims. Ann Arbor police suspect the man is in- volved in seven attempted rapes. The attacks took place on the city's west side with the latest assault occur- ring ofa41-year-old Ann Arbor woman as she was walking home near Com- munity High School on Oct. 13. The task force investigating the serial rapist, has released a physical description and a description the clothes the suspect was last seen wearing. Po- lice are now trying to connect the Oct. 13 rape with the previous cases through DNA testing of bodily fluids left on the woman. The tests are being conducted at the Michigan State Police Crime Laboratory in Northville. DNA evidence has already indi- cated that four of the rapes were com- mitted by the same man, Semen, blood, skin cells or hair are often left behind in cases of violent crimes and sexual as- saults. When a match is made with samples taken from a suspect, the re- suIts can be highly incriminating, plac- ing the suspect at the scene of the crime. This is what is known in criminal inves- tigations as "DNA fingerprinting." DNA is often thought of as the "blueprint" for life. Short for deoxyri- bonucleic acid, DNA is the basic ge- netic material of life. The nucleus of every living cell has chromosomes that contain a string of material called DNA. DNA controls the production of pro- teins and carries genetic information from one generation ofcells to the next. All the information necessary for the blueprint of an individual is carried within the cell. There are four chemical bases strung like beads in DNA. The actual order of these in the DNA's double- helix structure -in which two nucleic acid strands are wound around each other. Except in cases of identical twins, where a fertilized egg is split into two genetically identical eggs, DNA is what makes one person dif- ferent from another. A human being has approximately three billion of these beads divided among 23 different chromosomes pairs - one from the mother and the other from the father. Another basic principle important to DNA analysis is that genes that are part of the chromosomes are inherited randomly. It's the mixing and match- ing of the genetic contribution from one's parents that makes a person unique - a DNA fingerprint. It was only as recent as 1944 that pioneering experiments in DNA fin- gerprinting were done, which demon- strated that DNA was indeed the ge- netic material responsible for traits. Until that time, the exact biological material carrying the information that caused traits to be inherited was unknown. "Southern blotting" -- the basic technique for DNA fingerprinting - was first developed in 1975 and named after its discoverer, E.M. Southern. The first step in the technique is to "chop" the DNA into little pieces with restrictive enzymes from bacte- ria. This enzyme cuts the DNA at spe- cific sites into comparable sections. These fragments are separated by size over a gel film. When the gel is placed in an electric field, it spreads out the DNA into a smear that can be better analyzed. The smaller pieces spread faster along the gel than the larger snippets of DNA. Most of the differences between one person's DNA and another's have very little consequences in everyday life - except for the analysis that Southern blotting allows for compari- sons between two or more living things. On average, there are about 30 million differences between human beings. Eye color, for example, is an easily detectable gene that can be traced along family lines. A piece of paper is placed on top of the gel to "blot' it. The DNA is transferred to the paper. The piece of paper then has the identical smear as the gel. The image is then transferred onto film, where the genes' bands can more readily be identified and com- pared. If a VNA sample taken from the crime scene matches a suspect's sample and not one taken from the victim, the suspect is believed to have left the genetic evidence at the crime scene. Internal medicine and human ge- netics professor Dr. David Ginsberg, recently spoke at a meeting of the University's Research Club about what DNA fingerprinting is, how it is used in forensic science and how ac- curate it is. "In one really fairly spectacular case. there was a rape and murder in a small town in England,"'Ginsberg said. "They actually tested all the men in this community and finally caught the guy by identifying one of the men. So it's theoretically possible to do that but it's not something we would have an easy time doing in this country." Because DNA fingerprinting is very persuasive in courtrooms, critics claim innocent people can be convicted if the laboratories conducting the tests make a mistake. Ginsberg says, how- ever, that mistakes would only exoner- ate a person accused of a crime. "This is also a little publicized but I think an incredibly important applica- tion of DNA fingerprinting - 30 percent of the time when these samples are sent to a forensic lab, the suspect is exonerated," Ginsberg said. "You never hear about those cases. There's no complaints and the prosecution wouldn't bother trying the case. They're innocent. There's no way it can be them. They're off the hook." Ginsberg has so much faith in the accuracy and reliability of DNA finger- printing that he "would bet my life on it." "If I were falsely accused of a crime, the first thing I want is DNA testing," Ginsberg said. "That's the easiest way to settle the issue. But Ginsberg emphasized that DNA testing alone is not enough to convict. AP PHOTO A Los Angeles police criminologist examines O.J. Simpson's Ford Bronco two months after it was seized in this photo taken in late August, to be published in the December issue of LIFE magazine. Evidence reLted t Simpson's vehicle - including blood samples - has been the subject of court proceedings,. In sexual assault cases, chances are that genetic material is often left behind by the perpetrator. "In rape cases, it's been particu- larly effective tool because rapists generally tend to leave behind a sample of their own DNA," Ginsberg said. "Semen is basically just a bag of' DNA. It's a very good source of DNA. It s ery easy to separate f rom the rest of the material of the victim." DNA samples of that sort are diffi- cult to leave behind in an innocuous way. "When the semen sample is there, it's a little bit harder to explain," Ginsberg said. "'It just fell off when I was passing by,' is a little harder to get away with, harder to explain." Genetic testing is done by various forensic labs around the country and the FBI. Many of the initial problems with DNA testing stemmed from its early development. Ginsberg now feels that any errors are not the result of the actual test when it is done properly, but rather errors committed by a hu- man factor such as the technician con- ducting the tests or the way the police gathered the evidence. "Is DNA testing foolproof " Ginsberg asked. "DNA testing is not foolproof. One of the potential prob- lems is that they may be right about the identification but still have the wrong guy. Samples could be mixed up. Someone could be framed. All sorts of things could be going on and that has to be kept in mind." DNA evidence, Ginsberg reiterated, cannot stand alone as the only indicator of guilt. Other evidence presented by the prosecution must come into play. "All you can say as an expert is whether or not DNA came from a particular person," Ginsberg said. "Other than that, you really can't say much and the rest a jury has to decide." Ginsberg dismisses complaints as to the accuracy of DNA testing as legal maneuvering rather than sub- stantive claims. "All expert scientists agree that DNA is the genetic mate- rial, that DNA differences can be tested by Southern blotting," Ginsberg said. "You'll find absolutely no argu- ment among any reasonable, credible scientists. But there is argument, there has been controversy..." The sideshow bantering between expert witnesses brought in by the prosecution and defense is what has led to the confusion in the public's mind but there is no confusion in Ginsberg's mind. "In my mind, they're missing the forest for the trees," Ginsberg said. "This is very, very good evidence. It's better than anything they've had in a court of law before. But when you get one expert testifying, 'Well the odds of this being someone else is one probably for a hundred years. ... The major difference is that they've never been asked to do that. The evidence was accepted long ago and never debated." Even if DNA testing is not as foolproof as its critics claim, it is stil one of the most accurate kinds of evidence in existence. "DNA testine at its worst is as good as five or six eyewitnesses saying, 'That's the guy, Ginsberg said. There are still some improvements to be made in DNA fingerprinting, but for the most part, it has been admissible as evidence in a court of law. "There are still lots of issues," Ginsberg said. "It's not standardized. The testing labs are not regulated. All of these are going to be ironed out and they should be." "It has been uniformly accepted in Michigan and it's not even fought here much anymore," he said of DNA evi- dence being contested. "It still is a little bit in California as you well know." It doesn't take a huge amount of genetic material to conduct these tests, contrary to what one might expect. "To do a standard Southern blot, you need somewhere between a few hundred thousand cells to a million or so cells," Ginsberg said. "That sounds like a lot, but a single drop of blood has enough to do that kind of analysis." Another remarkable aspect of DNA is its durability under adverse conditions. "DNA is pretty stable stuff under the right circumstances but it can break down," Ginsberg said. "Ex- posed to the environment, just sitting outside on a bloody glove lying on the ground for example, it's stable for weeks and months." Even when it breaks dowtn, it vwould not have any negative imphcation "It woni tchineone bind of DNA to another and that's the cri ..ical thin , cesberesaid.'ii " t makevoilook like me just h\ sitin awround . 'You don't get false positiveCs. You get htlse negauives. ince k NA eidence la-s sch a crucial role in criminal in',esigations, it ofien becomes a targ~e1 I or criticism. Ginsberg believ.es that IDNA testing shotild be the least of the court's con- cerns. ''There's this savinie about the chain being as sTr'a. as its weakest link,' Ginshere sad "You got all these links the policeman at the crime scene gathering the blood, the technician in the lab. Right there in the middle ithehe DNA testing - the biggest, fattest link. Some people are worrying how strIong that is vhen there are other things more likely to be a source of eri'or than the DNA testing itself. Ginsberg pIredicts other uses for DNA fingerprinting are on the hori- zon but there are also ethical implica- tions to consider as well. "The army had a big prog'am once to DNA fingerprint ewerybody who went into the army - thinking that, you know, it would be tremendously useful for them," Ginsberg said. "If somebody was blown up and all you got was a little bit of their shoe with blood in it and you want to find out who that was, xou could now identify them. There would be a lot less miss ing in action. 01' course it raises the specter of everybody's fingerprints of being in this database and Big Brother.' Chemical base pairs of DNA " r +li. . ..... ? $. Y.. .? .....:4'4.tv4i."'L .u:"' ^i .r: 2.. .L Yk..'.+" i ..t . _ ,...... r'a ,