I'd say the interesting point of discussion comes from the fact that the NAS called DNA the Gold Standard for forensic science. As I mentioned in the FBI Exaggerates Thread, it seems as if the 'grass is greener' recommendations that were proposed and that our industry wants to adopt (statistical foundations, accreditation, etc) is not exactly the panacea we are lead to believe.The problems with the District lab have centered on the analysis of evidence that includes DNA from more than one person — and their conclusions regarding the likelihood that a certain person’s genetic material is included in the sample.
In their initial findings earlier this year, experts contracted by the U.S. attorney’s office said the problem came to light when an outside expert reviewed the DNA analysis conducted in a rape case. The biggest mistake involved the analysis of DNA found on a stolen car’s gearshift, prosecutors said. D.C. analysts looking at the evidence found that the car owner’s DNA could have been on the gearshift and said the chance that a randomly selected person had the same genetic traits was 1 in 3,290. The outside experts said the more accurate finding was 1 in 9.
The other big point of discussion in the article is this:
The age old adage of who polices the police rears its head. This could be said about any of the auditing organizations from ANAB to Ron Smith and Associates to Matthew Schwartz. It would be interesting to see if errors made by auditing bodies have been found or reported and what the outcomes were. It seems that accreditation/audit is really just a compounded problem. It's just an appeal to authority or a perceived independent body which may be overstating it's findings, which is exactly the problem audits/accreditation is supposed to prevent.The D.C. lab was audited last fall by the same accreditation organization that the city used to perform the new review. Houck said his lab passed the previous audit by the group. The FBI also audited the lab last year, he said.
In an interview, Terry Mills, an accreditation manager for the board that issued the report, said the audits were only a “snapshot in time” of a lab’s operations and that board officials would have to be “camped out for about six months” to thoroughly investigate a lab’s procedures.
While I don't agree with all the findings, I would have to commend the FBI's method of handling of Mayfield with an independent contractor reviewing, Robert Stacey's Report and the OIG report working comprehensively.