Title: Ethical Justice
1Ethical Justice
- Chapter Eight Ethical Issues in Forensic
Examination
2Ethical Issues in Forensic Examination
- When there is a criminal complaint, law
enforcement investigators are responsible for
conducting a criminal investigation. - To assist with this effort, it is necessary to
examine the physical evidence.
3The Role of the Forensic Examiner
- A forensic examiner refers to any professional
who examines and interprets physical evidence
with the expectation of courtroom testimony. - Forensic examiners analyze evidence in a
scientific manner to interpret the results
objectively and report their findings faithfully. - Forensic examiners employ the physical evidence
as a tool to sift out case theories that can
either be supported or refuted, and report this
to the decision makers. - The first onus of the forensic examiner is to
establish the objective facts of a case as
determined by a scientific examination of the
evidence. - Forensic examiners educate investigators,
attorneys, courts, and juries with findings. They
do not have an investment in the outcome.
4Traits of the Ethical Forensic Examiner
- The following are traits essential to a forensic
examiner - Develop, maintain, and demonstrate impartiality
- Acquire knowledge of scientific methodology and
demonstrate employment of scientific methodology
in their work - Maintain transparency
- Achieve and maintain scientific integrity a
level of trustworthiness that must be earned and
must not be assumed. - The anticipation of sworn expert testimony and
the offering of sworn expert testimony are
distinctive traits possessed by the forensic
examiner.
5The NAS Report
- The NAS report is the congressionally funded
system-wide investigation and review of forensic
science disciplines and crime laboratory
practice. - The NAS Report provides the following conclusions
in relation to forensic examiners - Forensic science and law enforcement are
culturally incompatible, with separate missions
in the justice system. - The majority of the forensic science community
lacks standardized terminology and report writing
requirements.
6The NAS Report
- Many forensic examiners perform examinations and
testify regarding subsequent findings with an
inappropriately high degree of certainty. - The NAS Report recommends empirical research into
the frequency and nature of examiner bias and
error. - Currently, there is no uniform code of ethics
across forensic science disciplines. - In order to practice forensic science
competently, the forensic examiners must first be
educated and trained as scientists.
7Examiner Bias and Role Strain
- Forensic examiners must be capable of
demonstrating that they have no emotional,
professional, or financial stake in the outcome
of legal proceedings. - In other words, they cannot be paid to guarantee
findings or testimony favorable to their
employer, nor can their advancements or pay be
connected to the success of one party over
another.
8Examiner Bias and Role Strain
- Picking Sides Picking Evidence
- Science must be honest and unbiased in its
methods and reporting. When scientists become
biased, and step outside of their objective role,
justice is perverted. - Cops in lab coats On the prosecution side, this
phrase has been used to describe those in public
laboratories who try and make their results match
their agencys case against the accused. - Hired guns on the defense side, these private
forensic experts will testify to any opinion. - Cherry picking the evidence provided to the
forensic examiner is often selected from the
crime scene by a police investigator in support
of a particular theory, or by a prosecutor
looking for a conviction.
9Examiner Bias and Role Strain
- Role Strain
- The objective mandates of good science are
frequently in direct conflict with the needs of
investigators, the desires of attorneys, and even
the rule of law as decided by various courts. - This conflict creates a strain in the role that
forensic scientists intend to serve.
10Institutional Pressure andObserver Effects
- The scientific observer is an imperfectly
calibrated instrument. - Imperfections stem from forms of bias, whether
conscious or unconscious, can easily contaminate
what appears outwardly to be an objective
undertaking. - These distortions may be caused by observer
effects a form of bias present when results of
a forensic examination are distorted by the
context and mental state of the forensic
examiner.
11Institutional Pressure andObserver Effects
- Identifying Observer Effects
- Forensic examiners must be aware the observer
effects exist and can significantly influence
their analysis and results. - Once recognized, they can be studied and
understood once understood, they can be
addressed and mitigates.
12Institutional Pressure andObserver Effects
- Mitigating Observer Effects
- The ethical forensic examiner has an obligation
to mitigate observer effects, to the extent
possible. The following must be taken into
consideration to mitigate subconscious bias - The forensic science community must use the same
checks and balances already adopted in other
scientific communities. - Forensic examiners must be capable of identifying
and filtering information that is irrelevant to
their examinations. - Evidence line-ups should be used when
appropriate, particularly within the
identification sciences. - Forensic examiners should be insulated from law
enforcement culture.
13Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Forensic examiners are hired to analyze the
evidence and objectively report findings, no
matter the outcome. - This may be done verbally, with a written report,
in formal interviews and sworn depositions, and
finally in the form of courtroom testimony.
14Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Due Process and Brady v. Maryland
- The 5th and 14th Amendments to the U.S.
Constitution provide that the government may not
deprive its citizens of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law. Any
condition or treatment that tends to bias a
judge, jury, or the process as a whole in favor
of the state is considered a violation of due
process. - Brady v. Maryland is a legal ruling from the U.S.
Supreme Court that holds, the suppression by the
prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused
upon request violates due process where the
evidence is material either to guilt or to
punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad
faith of the prosecution. It requires timely
disclosure of exculpatory evidence by the
prosecution to the defense.
15Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Writing it Down
- Forensic examiners have an ethical responsibility
to ensure that all examinations and results are
wholly and effectively communicated to the
intended recipients. - The most accepted form of professional
communication is a written report. - This also provides the forensic examiner with a
record of the examination that should be
sufficient to refresh their recollection from the
stand.
16Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Reporting Obligations of the Defense Examiner
- When working for the state, forensic scientists
are required to make written reports of any
examinations or tests performed on evidence, as
well as subsequent findings. They are also
required to preserve any photographs, drawings,
or bench notes generated. This is in accordance
with Brady v. Maryland. - When working for the defense, the rules of
discovery differ. A forensic examiner may be
asked to refrain from writing a report of their
findings.
17Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Inconclusive IS a Result
- Inconclusive findings are a result. They are
relevant to the reconstruction of a crime, the
nature and extent of examinations performed, the
evidence they were performed on, the quality of
any testing, the competency of the examiner, and
any legal proceedings that hinge upon the weight
that a judge or jury attributed to that evidence.
- The practice of selecting which results to
disclose is dishonest, and may be referred to as
another form of cherry picking.
18Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Cherry Picking violates due process because
- The concealment of any examination performed on
any item of evidence represents a break in the
chain of custody. - The execution of any examination on an item of
evidence has a potential impact on its volume and
quality. - The failure to notify the police, court, or
attorneys involved in a case regarding the
existence of inconclusive examinations assists
with concealing the cause behind such results. - The failure to investigate and report the cause
of inconclusive results potentially conceals the
error ate and/or the individual examiner
proficiency rate related to a particular test.
19Ethical Issues in Report Writing
- Ghost authorship
- This occurs when the person whose name appears on
the publication was not involved either in doing
the research, framing the ideas behind the
articles, or in writing the article.
Alternatively, it can occur when an individual
who has made substantial contributions to the
manuscript is not named as an author or whose
contributions are not cited in the
acknowledgements. - This is generally considered a form of scientific
misconduct.
20Ethical Issues in Expert Testimony
- The ethical forensic examiner will refrain from
making any false or misleading statements,
especially when giving sworn testimony. - The Ultimate Issue - the legal questions before
the trier of fact. It is the role of forensic
practitioners to educate the court as to
scientific opinions related to and bordering on
the ultimate issues, but they must fully
acknowledge their limitations. - Perjury the act of lying or making verifiably
false statements on a material matter under oath
or affirmation in a court of law or in any sworn
statements in writing.
21Forensic Fraud
- Forensic fraud occurs when forensic examiners
provide sworn testimony, opinions, or documents
bound for court that contain deceptive or
misleading information, findings, opinions, or
conclusions, deliberately offered in order to
secure an unfair or unlawful gain. - Forensic examiners can be cross-categorized as
having used one or more of the three general
approaches to committing fraud - Simulators those examiners who physically
manipulate physical evidence or related forensic
testing. - Dissemblers those examiners who exaggerate,
embellish, lie about, or otherwise misrepresent
findings. - Pseudoexperts those examiners who fabricate or
misrepresent their credentials.