Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Abstract DNA profiling has been assuming a prominent role in the activi-
ties of the criminal justice system. Genetic technologies support criminal
investigations, while also being seen as holding a highly valuable potential
for producing evidence to be used in courts. This chapter has two main
objectives: on the one hand, to describe and explain the ways that DNA
technologies can be used in criminal investigation and turned into DNA
evidence in criminal proceedings; on the other hand, this chapter aims to
systematize the main lines of academic literature within the social sciences
which have been developed to study the social implications and transfor-
mations of cultures and professional practices arising from the presence of
DNA technology in the criminal justice system. Besides, the chapter also
pays particular attention to the social nature of the high expectations asso-
ciated to the “infallibility” of DNA technologies and how the media por-
trays the use of forensic genetics and further exacerbates such notions.
respective viewers (Brewer & Ley, 2010; Schweitzer & Saks, 2007), on
jurors—ordinary citizens summoned by courts to evaluate criminal cases
that may be complex and may involve DNA evidence—and also on judges
and police investigators themselves (Cole & Dioso-Villa, 2007; Durnal,
2010; Huey, 2010; Shelton, Kim, & Barak, 2006).
There is also a study group focusing on how a specific social group,
individuals serving prison sentences, views media messages about DNA
technology. According to existing studies (Machado & Prainsack, 2012;
Machado, Santos, & Silva, 2011; Prainsack & Kitzberger, 2009), prison-
ers tend to believe that DNA evidence has almost absolute power in terms
of identification, based on the idea that the genetic profile is a technology
with a probative and criminal identification capability which is far superior
to fingerprints. However, the infallibility of DNA technology is not con-
sidered to be absolute by these inmates: they accentuate the possibility of
human error and harbour strong suspicions of police officers or malicious
individuals who may deliberately “plant” biological traces in crime scenes
to incriminate them. They have also stated that they fear that the authori-
ties will lie about the existence of DNA evidence to obtain confessions
from criminal suspects (Machado et al., 2011).
Another aspect to be noted concerning the consequences that the TV
series has on the professionals of the justice system is the concern har-
boured by the community of forensic scientists in relation to the alleged
lack of public literacy. The CSI effect, together with a lack of literacy on
the probabilistic framework involved in the interpretation of DNA evi-
dence, is considered by many forensic geneticists to be the major obstacle
in their task of communicating the results of DNA analysis to members of
the criminal justice system (Amorim, 2012; Amorim et al., 2016). A recent
study on the subject, based on the social representations of members of
the forensic genetics community in Europe, highlights the scientists’ con-
cerns about how the professionals of the justice system and members of
the public attribute an excessively “enthusiastic” and “optimistic” value in
relation to DNA’s capacity as evidence in court cases (Amelung, Granja, &
Machado, 2019). In response to these challenges, there are a few strate-
gies for addressing such risk communication. Some examples include pro-
viding concrete models for good practice for evaluative expert reporting
and suggesting standards for evaluative reporting within professional net-
works, such as the European Network of Forensic Science Institutes
(ENFSI) (Biedermann, Champod, & Willis, 2017).
52 H. MACHADO AND R. GRANJA
CONCLUDING REMARKS
The risk associated with the use of DNA technologies in the criminal jus-
tice system most commonly identified in the literature, in the fields of
forensic genetics and the social sciences, regards the myth of the infallibil-
ity of genetic identification. Academic research reveals how notions related
to the alleged infallibility of DNA technologies can condition the conduct
of the police investigation itself, and how evidence is appraised in court.
To this effect, it is desirable to question the framework of DNA evidence
and consider the circumstances of each specific case. One possible way is
to consider that the DNA profile should only be used as a means of back-
ing up other types of evidence, and to safeguard the principle of equal
access to evidence, defence and prosecution, as already occurs in most
justice systems.
Another risk arising from the use of DNA technology, which should
not be dissociated from the myth of its infallibility, concerns the risk of
stigmatization arising from social inequalities, which are reproduced as
soon as police forces decide to collect a biological sample of certain indi-
viduals to the detriment of others. The literature on sociology and crimi-
nology has systematically referred to the way that police practices primarily
target individuals and communities who are considered to pose risks. This
risk of suspicion is directed towards identification and subsequent collec-
tion of data (DNA profile and other biometric data) from the most
deprived social groups and individuals belonging to so-called ethnic
minorities (Chow-White & Duster, 2011; Cole & Lynch, 2006; Duster,
2006; Skinner, 2013; Williams & Johnson, 2004b).
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