Of Justice
Of Justice
Of Justice
Departmentof Justice
National Institute of Justice
This document has been reproduced exactly as received from the
person or organization originating it. Points of view or opinions stated
in this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily
represent the official position or policies of the National lnstitute of
Justice.
SU tnemtrapeD of
ecitsuJ
to the National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS)
I- - ---- . -- - . -- -- -
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6891
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . x i i i
7Introduction ...................... 1
7 What Role for Evidence ................. 2
Types of Evidence: A Breakdown ............. 8
Forensic Evidence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
The Development of Forensic Laboratories . . . . . . . . 11
Empirical Research into the Utilization of
Scientific Evidence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Access by the Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
>The Effectiveness of Scientific Evidence
in the Judicial System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Chapter 11: GOALSANDMETHODS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Project G o a l s . . . . . .........
.. . . . . . . . . . 22
..............
ReportOrgani.ation...
\?
,@
. . . . . ai . . . . . . . 26
Chapter 111: 6
STUDY SITE DESCRI *IONS@
,! .... .... 29
I O ~ U C O . . . . . . . \ .+M
0,
. . . . .
..............
Chicago/Cook C o u n t y . . . .
29
29
Peoria County ....... ...............
i 39
..........
Kansas City/Jackson County. Missouri 45
...........
Oaklandl~lamedaCounty. California 51
............
New HavenILitchfield. Connecticut 57
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Method of Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
The Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
/Overall Rates of Usage of Forensic Evidence . . . . . . . 74
. .-
t Rates- of-Usage-of Forensic Evidence-by Crime.Type- c
Rates of Usage of Specific Types of Forensic Evidence . .
Change in Rates of Usage of Specific
Types of Forensic Evidence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
7-6-'-
81
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Origin and Placement of Laboratories . . . . . . . . . . 107
Service Policies and Practices . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Availability of Services to Various Users . . . . . . . . 109
Laboratory Budgets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
Number of Personnel in Laboratories . . . . . . . . . . . 115
Case Examination Practices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
Laboratory Caseloads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
Technological Innovations and Research . . . . . . . . . 123
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
7Chapter VI: IMPACT OF FORENSIC EVIDENCE FROM THE TRIAL
. . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
ATTORNEY'S PERSPECTIVE
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Charging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Plea Disposition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
Pre-Trial Discovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
Trial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
Jury Comprehension . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
Defense Challenges . . . . .f . . . . . . . . 141
Effectiveness of Expe ........ 145
Overall Evaluation of . . . . . . . . . 148
en~e..~
Introduction- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
_ -__ .
..
..
. - .
. -....
stcef E ehT fo
ecn divE c sneroF
no ytil ba orP . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186
fo noitc v C
si ylanA detag r A . . . . . . . . 188
fo se n f O cif epS
yram uS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
noitcud r nI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
dohteM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
Overiw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 252
noisulc C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 287
....
SECN R F . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 1 1
SECIDN P A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-1
'
FIGURES AND TABLES
. . . . . . . . . . . - - -122
Table 5.7 Cases Per Examiner By Type of
Jurisdiction Served
elbaT
7.2 resU gnid atsrednU fo ecna if ngiS fo
yrota b L
stlu eR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
351
elbaT
7.3 ro uJ :se nopseR esn f O epyT dna emoctuO esaC .
651
elbaT 7.4 lairT :emoctuO tcidreV dna ytlucif D/esaE of
nois ceD - nois erg R cits goL . . . . . . . . . 162
elbaT
8.1 cisneroF ecn divE dna noitc v C . . . . . . . .
17
elbaT
2.8 ecn divE elbignaT dna noitc vnoC . . . . . . . .
371
elbaT
8.3 :noitcivnoC
nois erg R cits goL esiwpetS
yb Site. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178
elbaT
8.4 :noitc vnoC esiwp tS
nois erg R cits goL
yb esn f O epyT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
Table
9.1 do hilek L fo nopU noitarec a nI
noitc v C
yb Site, gnil ortn C rof fo epyT esn f O . . . .
102
erugiF
-1.9
5.9 noitub r s D fo secn t eS noitarec a nI yb Site . 20
Table
9.2 htgneL a M fo noitarec a nI yb
gnil ort C ,etiS
rof epyT fo esn f O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Table
9.3 Charge do hilek L dna oitcudeR
fo
noitarec a nI .................. 206
Table
9.7 egrahC :noitcudeR
nois erg R elpit uM esiwpetS
yb esn f O epyT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
I
elbaT
9.8 :noitarec a nI
nois erg R elpit uM esiwpetS
I
--
--
elbaT
9.9 :noitarec a nI
nois erg R elpit uM esiwp tS
I yb esn f O epyT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
72
htaP etisopm C :ledoM noi.tarec a n1 . . . . . . 29
STNEMGD LWO KCA
very etanu rof ot have detc les eht study seti taht ew di rof we
dna- suorem n len osrep niht w eht scit lan m rc s'tnem rap D
-obal
xiii
ylem rtx w ,rotanid lufp eh ni noitamr f gnitcel o ruo ni
sa n K
:tnem rapeD namroN feihC Caron, redluoM mail WrojaM dna .rM Gary
.ecnatsi a
vix
We deil r nopu sevral stna lusnoc dleif dna at d srotcel ni
ruo
dleif :snoitacol .rM giarC Gand, Ms. dna set or G htiduJ .sM lyrehS
Thornt, .sM Dunca Debra nav ,laW red and .sM esin D is r oT
-kaO ni
,dnal and CA; .rD Gaensl, Robrt .rM samohT yar uM and .rM
samohT
.soiranec s laciteh opy
Melisa Smrz dna .sM Yvone .htimS Yvone deir ac eht nedrub fo
-unam
ramdiV and ThomsDug and rehto setaico fo eht Centr rof Resarch
l uf tpec a
.ytil b snop er
evitucexE
yram uS
)cif tneics( ecn div ni eht ,gni rahc aelp ,noita gen lairt
dna
and epocs fo
.snoitarepo
tnec r
.sraey
fo
.stnad ef ynolef
hcaorp A
--__ _ --
xvi
scient fic evidence and to det rmine the ef ects of this evidence on
case outc me, we to k a random sampling of felony case fil ngs in six
Con ecuti . Thes samples wer taken from thre years: ,6791
8791
tha could be pres nted in court, we interview d prosecutors and def nse
prosecutors in the f lony trial div sion of the sta e' at orney's
on crim nal case proces ing. And, last y, to dev lop a bet r under-
trials.
Forensic E v i d e n c eU s a g e
Sta es, most situated within police agenci s. Ac ording to their own
- --
,-t rope the bulk of-casewrk -kirtlies3i lab53kries si not evidence
xvi3.i
and narcotics and the det rmination of alcoh l content of samples
relat d.
One of the major objectives fo this study was to det rmine rates of
murders/ag rav ted bat eries do. Rob eries seldom have scientif c
tors and the court view the importance of the evidence in proving the
~ ~ - -
.~.
~
xi
The fivecategories fo scientif c evidence which ap ear most
frequently are ni( this orde ) drugs, fingerp ints, firea ms, blo d and
blo dstains and semn. This pat ern fo usage sug est tha laboratories
man er, laboratories a r e a l s o com only requested to find the pres nce of
the def nda t with a crime, as with fingerp ints or firea ms. From a
crime, for example blo dstains, hair or other trace evid nc . Our
interviews ith prosecutors also indicate tha they place great value on
forms fo evidence with which juro s are famil ar (such as fingerp ints)
and about which experts can deliver clear and unequivocal sta em nts.
cutors and cite drugs, fingerp ints and firearms as the most influential
are prosecutors, about the signif cance fo trace vidence which may be
\
regular suc es ni chemical y identifying su pect d drugs (90% or more
rape from 05 to %57 of the .emit Labor t ies are able to link def -
than lf the .emit The an lysi fo blo dstain evid nce serv to
as ociate the def nda t and the c r i m e about 02 - %05 of the time.
esot ric forms fo evid nce (e.g., hairs, fibers, glas , paint, soil,
).cte in ac ounts of cel brated crimes, our res arch shows they ra ely
si both a function fo the infrequ ncy with whic s u c h evid nce si re-
cover d from the scen s of crimes and an lyzed in the labor t y as wel
sa the more lim ted i n f o r m a t i ownh i c h examiners may extrac from .ti
ehT
low rates fo usage are the result of a host of factors, but partic-
ix
in the number fo labor t ies, the gr ater sophist ca ion fo techniques
and instruments with n the labor t ies and a judic al sy tem growing
course, si tha ther si now les non drug- elat d forensic evid nce
in the mid-1970s.
Althoug our case file an lysi does not permit us to examine the
complet d yb the authors (Pet rson te ,.la )4891 found tha charges are
than sti use in verifying sta em nts of witnes , tub more importan
-- - - - - - -- -- - -
ix
would be the nec s ity fo having a laboratory an lysi in charging a
def nda t with drug pos e i n. One of the prima y reason prosecutors
ind cate the most likely path of disposit on for each case, begin g
ta
for example, ti si only wher the def nda t fails to confes to the
tors predict they would not bring charges ag inst the def n a t. For
the d fenda t with the of ense tha they are unlike y ot charge.
The an lysi of our hypothetical case also provides ins ght to the
- - -- - - - - -- - -- -
gen ral, then, ti si the absenc of more than one type fo evid nce whic
evidence becom s so weak in a case tha the def nse perc ives ther to
t a k e n t o trial.
Conviction
crim nating sta em nts (made by about one-third of def nda ts) are the
po erty tub( not scientif cal y an lyzed) as ociat ng the def nda t with
the crime (more than half the sampled case had one or more such items)
sta istical y sign ficant, main predictor in only one of the study
locatins: Peoria. Her we found tha the mer pres nce of a labo-
-- - - --- - - - - - -
ant with the crime, howev r, has an ev n greater ef ct, increasing the
xxiv
interac d with other evid ntiary vari bles ni Kansa City and New Haven
fens, tub in Kans City ti si wher the def ndant refus to make a
evid nce has its great s main ef ct on the conviction fo def nda ts
labor t y repo t increas the rate of conviction for burgla ies, while
lab repo ts as ociat ng the def n a t with the crime prove to eb sign f-
exp ct a very hig pro tion of case t o result in convict on. We are
murde case. Both rapes and t empt murde s are exp cted to result in
tangible evid nce and no confes i . For the at empt murder ti also
absence of a confes ion and when forensic evidence weakly as ociates the
def nda t with the of ens , and 2) w h e n both the tangible and forensic
forensic evid nc , rega dles of the certainty with which ti con ects
XW
the def n a t with the crime, si predicted to result in higher rates
fo
convi t .
The outc mes fo the ypothe ical case decis on are in agre m nt
with our case file sample and our intervi ws with prosecutors in two
basic respct. First, the perc ption fo prosecutors tha most case
sample. Secondly, it si when case eith r lack evid nce and have two
ro
Charge R duction
cutions. Using this as our dep nde t vari ble, we find tha the absence
reduced charge.
wher a forensic variable interacts with another evid nce vari ble,
ti
prosecut ' case tha a forensic repo t as ociating the d fenda t with
Our of ens specif an lysi shows tha forensic evid nce ex rts a
repo ts are as ociated with convictions to the top charge. In sev ral
m i
c o m b i n a t i o nw i t h a n i n c r i m n a t i n g s t a e m n t to lead to convictions to
Our hypothe ical dat are not dis im lar from thes case file
result . Ther is, howev r, only one of ense category (burgla y) wher
dat permit ed an an lysi fo this vari ble. Results gen ral y showed
a reduced charge. When the def ndant denies com it ing the crime, when
ni a distan location r only tenta ively as ociates the def nda t with
the c,rime scen , chan es tha the case wil be pled to a les r charge
wer increas d.
Sentencing
verity of sanctions given convicted def nda ts. The more serious the
an importan predictor in two sites (New Haven and Chicago), wher the
as ociated with hig er rates of incarceration, dep nding upon the se-
i vx
riousnes fo the of ense in question. In the ag regated of ens
an lysi , sim lar factors are importan predictors fo sentence sev rity.
convicted fo at empt murder/ag rav ted bat ery and rob e y. As befor ,
incar e tion.
convicted felons.
o f e n s ea n d being convicted of the orig nal charge are the key pre-
months .
The ag regated of ense an lysi finds tha forensic evidence reg-
isters its major impact for the crimes of at empt murder/ag rav ted
bat ery, rape, rob ery and burgla y. Longer sentences aregiven def nd-
ants wher laboratory reports are pres nt. In two f ense categories
(rob ery and thef ) the pres nce of an as ociative laboratory find g
def ndant sta em nts are absent or consti ute a plausible alib .
For our hypothetical case dat , we are able to conduct an lyse for
thre of ense types: at empt murde , rob ery and burgla y. No evid n-
xwili
tiary factors em rge as predictive of length of sentence for at emp
murde s. For the rob ery and burglary of ens , as in our earlie
the def nda t with the of ense or ther si a lack fo a confes ion,
ey witnes identif cation and weak tangible evid nce tha prosecutors
a shift from gen ral reliance on def ndant background char cterist c to
One variable tha does not fit this trend si forensic evid nc .
tI
cor ob ration of the prosecuti n's case, reduc s any shread of dubt in
the judge's mind concerni g the def n a t's guilt and fre s the s nte c-
We should rem ber tha scientist us al y do not rec ive fe dback from
tes ify, not tmoe n t i o n the great majority of case wher exp rts don't
xxix
tes ify and the repo ts alone serv as the scientif c evidnc. Our
dat ind cate tha labor t ies seldom rec ive any form fo fe dback
ni
Trial
tes ify in court in les than 10% fo the case t h e y examin. Con-
Despite the infrequ ncy with which examiners testify in court, labo-
rato y examiners beli ve their examin t ons have their great s impact
ta the trial .egats Prosecutors to, share the opin on tha juries are
someti s fear goin into a trial withou forensic evid nce if they
think the jury wil exp ct .ti I ns u c h situa ions, prosecutors wil go
to great lengths to explain why they are not introducing physical evi-
denc. Consi ten with this, our survey of juro s im ediately after
befor them.
have the best understandi g of s c i e n t i f c evid nce, and tha judges and
XXX
srotuc ev il b tsom taht era sro uj elbap c etiuq fo
yna g idnatsrednu
.ecn dive In rehto ,sdrow eht rotucesorp tsum evr s terp tnio
eht
ecn dive dev ileb taht dah ecn div hcus ,tnesba ne b yeht dluow
evah
scit yeht esu cisnerof egn l ahc ot gni ar ,ecn div morf strof e
ot
have the evidence ruled inadmis ible (on search and seizure or chain of
fense counsel at empt to "explain aw y" the physical evidence by sup ly-
ing a reasonable and lawful explan tion for its pres nce. If the above
tactics can ot eb used, def nse counsel wil usual y stipulate to the
discus es sev ral key policy questions ad res ed by the res arch.
used. The igh drug caseloads coupled with the perception by prosecu-
seod yhW cisnerof ecn dive have tcapmi snoitc d ruj emos ni
tub
ton
?srehto
laic duj .s ecorp yduts ihT saw htiw decaf convit hg setar
ni
gnid vorp cif tne s stlu er fo ytnia rec t g and .ytif ceps tA
eht
fo
.trope yrota b l
diova eht tcepsor fo gnisol an esiwr hto strong ,esac rathe naht
rof
ot nigeb
.htiw
Wher should law enforcem nt agencies concentrate their esources?
the best predictor. Nev rthel s , law enforcem nt agencies should place
Ef orts must also be made yb police, prosecutors and def nse at orneys
CHAPTER I
THE ROLE OF EVID NCE IN THE ADJU ICAT ON OF CRIM NAL CASE:
Introduction
evid nce ni det rmin g the outc mes of case , at least in the adju ic -
Somewher betw n thes two extr mes like y lies reality. Evidence
tion itself si vague. Wher betw n t h e two p lar views does tru h
actual y lie? And fo particular inter s ot this res arch project, what
recov red pro e ty, incr minat g sta em nts ro confes ions by the
plea negotia on, trial, and sentencing stages of crim nal case
adju ic t on.
proces ing. The lega com unity has declared tha evidence should be
thek y det rmina of trial outc mes; consequ ntly, the op ortunit es
Yet the role fo evid nce in the decis on fo whet r t o charge, its
by the police; based upon facts gather d yb the police most of thes
could be charged. Yet the majority are not charged. Com unity polit-
ster otypes (Stanko, ,)1891 vict m/witnes char cteristics (~il iams,
1978) or conflicts with the police lead prosecutors to ignore the evi-
but not suf ic ent for a case to be charged. A second perspective iews
- ~ ~ ~ -- ~ -- ~ ~ ~
the prosecut ' chargin decis on .g.e( Bernstein, Kel ey & Doyle,
197 ; Jacoby, .)2891 Boland te .la )8:3891( examined reason why
prosecutors rej cted felony ar est and found tha "witnes problems and
tions ta screnig." She, also, found tha witnes and evid nce reason
filed. Boland, also, det rmined tha witnes problems are much more
prosecutors may typical y charge provide ther si suf ic ent evid nce
adopt a stric er stand r , cho sing t o charge only case tha are "trial
' yhtrow -- win able fi pres d t o trial (Jacoby, .)2891 Sim larly, when
tance of the evid nce as ociated with a .esac Charging decis ons wer
during the ar est (ther by rend ring evid nce legal y inadmsble).
Whet r ther was cor boration yb two or more police witnes , and
whet r pro e ty was found in the pos e ion of the def n a t. A prio
evid ntiary factor) decr ased the proba il ty tha a case would be
charged. In sum, ac ording ot this view evidence si nec s ary and some
any ins ght into the relative alue of dif er nt kinds of evid nce in
the charging decis on. We know neither the kinds of evidence prosecu-
tors dep nd upon to charge, nor the kinds of evidence prosecutors pur-
char cter of plea discus ions thems lves. In Prair e City a.( pseudonym
- befor and after his 1974 study -- have emphasized the sentencing
aspects of theat orneys ' discu ions. Newman (1966) port ays plea
".stcaf Heuman ,)7 91( to , emphasizes negotiations over sent ce, but
- - - ---- -
---
(perha s as high sa 90%) a r e withou any lega def nse . i e., "born
(1974, most, but not al , case are "dea bang" case wher the
plea confer nces? The lack of dispute over evid nce, or the choi e by
court o mactors to avoid talking about evid nce, does not nec s arily
true. The impact fo the videnc may eb so clear tha neither prosecu-
which include: the basic facts fo the case, av ilable evid nce, ef c-
tiven s fo witnes es ta trial, the d fenda t's ac ount of the inc dent
barg in, very concerned with the vidence as ociated with a case.
their .~~
anl ys si ~
ag regates various -
fo- .sePpyt
'- - -se ~s-a sedu-lce rp- dna-ecn d.ixe - ~
Fe n y, Dil and Weis' (1983) study fo rob ery and burgla y ar est in
San Diego and Jacksonvil e found evid nce to eb the most importan
ing convict on for San Diego rob eri swhile vict m-w nes problems
and confes ion yb the def nda t wer the most importan factors in
t h e i rm u l t i p e r e g s i o n a n l y s e , l e a d i n g .to c o n s i d e r a b l ec o l i n e a r i t y
and know lit e about the importance of various kinds fo evid nce for
def nse at orneys as ign to various kinds fo evid nce in the plea nego-
tiations proces ? Are thes "weights based upon their own values about
clearly established by the lega profes ion for the trial proces.
tI
(196, ni their landm rk study fo jury behavior, con lude tha most
(about 75%) j u r i e s in crim nal case fol w the videnc pres nted, and
reach verdicts ident cal to those of law-tr ined judges (i.e., consi t-
-- -
tne
-.---
with the .)Tcnediv Wher juries depart from the videnc , the
- -
.ecn dive
gni m lairt emoctu sa eht lagel dluow ytinum oc epoh ti would .eb
teY
sepyt fo .ecnedive tsroF ' s (1977) noitag sevni fo and felony suoire
eb either inv cible or more easily destroyed than any other type of
evid nce. tuB an empir cal as es ment of the weight tha juro s as ign
to various types
.. evidence fo evidence has not be n conducted.
proces ing si gen ral y unspecif ed and unk ow . The relative impact of
this res arch to clarify the contribution of scientif cand other types
Stolen pro e ty, or clothing, typical y si used to as ociate the def nd-
ant with the crime by means of size, name tags, other marks of iden-
about half of the rob ery arest. Recov red stolen pro e ty was
av ilab e in about one-quart fo ar est for both rob ery and burgla y.
about %02 fo rob ery ar est tub les than %01 fo burgla y arest.
Def nda t's clothing was av ilab e as evid nce in about %51-0 fo rob-
nI na an lysi of the frequ ncy fo such evid nce in trials, Kalven and
Zeis l )34-2 1:6 91( found certain types fo evid nce (e.g., police
tes imony) virtual y always pres nted, tub the frequency of other types
trials %79( and 94%, resp ctiv ly), tub seldom in drug trials
.)%71(
Confes ions wer frequ nt in murde trials ,1x34( tub les so in other
dep nds on extrins c evid nce indep nde tly secur d through
fect me ory or the traum as ociated w i t h a crim nal act which compr -
mise the reliab lity fo sta em nts from the victim ro witnes t oa
~
~--
.emirc Just as our society has grown increasingly dep nde t on adv nce-
10
ation, contr l disea , and def n our nation, our judic al proces has
Com is on,
.)15:7691
whose forem st aim si "win g the cas," the scient 's goal si the
Begin g in about 1930 and ext ndi g to the late 1960's, forensic
-- -- - - ---
early crime labor t ies c a m e into existenc indep nde tly f r o m one
ency among the natio 's crime labor t ies in terms of stand r s, pro-
Although about one hundred crime labor t ies wer in existenc in the
about 30) in the d ca e from 1970 to .0891 This was largely the r sult
of four factors:
inter ogation practi es, c o u p l ewdi t h special crime panels cal ing
upon the police and the entire crim nal justice sy tem to
contr l crime.
the 1970s.
facil t es.
guide the an lysi and interp eta ion fo evid nc , and the no existence
- -- - --
---
of man gem nt repo ting s y t e m s to permit theas ment of the f ects
12
The stand r for admis on of scient fic evid nce ni court has
changed lit e over the tsap sixty years. Frye v. United Sta es 293 Fed
II
gen ral ' ecnatpec a standard was the courts way fo insuring tha nei-
ther the j u d i c a rnyo lay juro s would be exposed to scient fic result
w-
hich may - be unreliab .
..
Ther are ind cations, howev r, tha courts have begun ot relax the
more novel scient fic techniques (Gian el , 1980). With few exc ptions
(the polygraph and voice spectrog aph notably among them) most courts
clude her would be the use fo el ctroph resi to char cterize the
gen tic marke s,of blo d and sem n, t h e scan i g el ctron microscope to
Given the increas in the number of crime labor t ies, cient fic
exp ct tha a sizeable perc ntage fo case would invol e forensic evi-
testimony are rec ived by judic al fact- inders should prom te its
util za on. Surveys fo judges and at orneys, for example, find over-
whelming sup ort for the increas d use of scien in the court m.
of physical evid nce in the fut re (pet rson te ,.la .)7 91 None-
proces.
Parke's )3691( survey of forensic labor t ies rev aled few r than
Benso , 1970; Rogers, 1970;Parke and Pet rson, 1972; Parke and Gur-
gin, ,)2791 have rev aled sim lar result . As Benso )0791( staed:
-
The-i~n~o~~e~ntTf-tI~~i~
lab= try iiT€het to a 1
body fo crime has be n smoi n s c u l e as to preclude
Parker and Gurgin (1972) con lude tha drug nois .e p charges rec ived
)0791( national study fo police crim nal investiga on units also found
tha the an lysi fo drug and arcotic evidence had "displace " the
say, burgla y, thef , rob ery or as ult .se ac This is partly due to
study, The American Jury, include a brief overview fo the use of exp rt
an exprt. Prosecutors used exp rts four times a often as def nse
at orneys .
Further indication of the lim ted use fo forensic evid nce in court
tif c evid nc .
51
We think our study show an incredible gal in the
.)Ol3:769l
Ac es by t h eD f e n s e
Another conti u ng problem con er ing the use and ef cts fo foren-
labor t ies do not permit thean lysi of evid nce on behalf fo the
evid nce prio to trial. One noted crim nal def nse at orney has com-
mented tha being located within a police organiz t on leads the crime
labor t y:
Inasmuch as most (>go%) crim nal def ndants are ind gent, ti si a
ra e oc asion tha a crim nal def nse lawyer wil employ the s rvices of
crim nal def nda ts, the scarcity of indep nde t forensic examiners and
scient fic findings yb con eding the result and arguin its pres nce
may ex rt a trem ndous impact o n case dispo t n. For insta ce, many
practi oners and lega scholars share the beli f tha scientif c evi-
credib l ty.
Ther is, howev r, relatively lit e mpir cal evalu tion fo the ef cts
fo forensic evidnc.
--
o fxiQnti f-iCteS "Ingi -t i-e-h r-de ch 1-on-t ~-charge~
US peet-s-o ,-r -o f r-tha - t
mat er, to dism charges once filed. In the case studie , a forensic
orig nal as op osed to a reduc charge. Howev r, since the res archers
tA trial, Calspan found scientif c evid nce pres nted in about half
rato y. The physical evid nce was repo ted yb( the prosecutor) to be
decis ve in about %04 fo thes trials and cor ob rative fo other evi-
denc in another .%04 Def nse exp rt witnes es rebut ed the scientif c
with the def nda t in about %1 fo rob ery and 2% fo burgla y ar est .
Pet rson, Mihajlovic and Gil iland )4891( rec ntly published a
random sample of about 2,70 police files in four jurisd ctions. Case
--
on police investigations, res arche s tracked case to their final
o Of ense with scientif cal y an lyzed evid nce had hig er rates
of police clear nce and ar est than of ens withou such evid nc .
evid nc .
crime) the greater was the likeliho d the case would go to rial.
Saks and Van Duizend )3891( sought to describe the problems whic
arise ta the trial lev when lit gators at emp to use scientif c and
case studies and various other intervi ws, the authors prop sed pos ible
solutions and avenu s fo fut re res a ch. Although admit edly a qual-
ita ive and, in many respects, subjective review of case and practi es
employed, the res arch pres nt the at itudes and opin o s fo various
court actors about the value of forensic evid nce ni case sa they
progres from the pre-tial lev, through the trial, and into the
ap e l stage.
Sum ary
In con lusion ther are dif er nt types fo evid nce whic can be
types fo evid nce tha are like y to be av ilable and tha may be pres-
central
:sem ht
with whic this evid nce si used and res arch design whic
forms fo evid nc .
- RETPAHC I1
Project Goals
have det rmined tha ti si ra ely av ilable; howev r, thes studies have
published which examined pat erns of usage at the court lev. Con-
of whether tha rate has, as impl ed by the crim nal justice litera u e,
the use of forensic evid nce, the cur ent report alsopres nts the
1 evid nce,
denc , on
and ther lative ef ects
charging,
_ ---
disposit on and
fo
sentencing
various
A
types
decis on .
-
of forensic
In
--
examin g
evi- ----
I
12
the r lative ef ct fo forensic evid nce we consider the opin o s
fo
j u r o s and prosecut .
Method logy
, U t i l z a t i o n of Forensic Evidence
sev ral jurisd ctions. We sel cted the years 1975, 1 9 7a 8n d 198. Dat
col ection in
.3891
Il ino s; Kansa City, Mis ouri; Oakl nd, California; and New Haven a d
jurisd ctions also refl ct at enda t dif er nces ni crime rates, numbers
their resp ctive court sy tem . The labor t ies sel cted also rep-
sent dif er nt organiz t onal struc res for the deliv ry of scient fic
servic: munic pal (Chicago and okl); regional (~ansas City and
ographical y, the site are distr buted throug t the west rn, central
plains and east rn sectors of the counry. Resource (grant) lim ta ons
aders may wish tha we had chosen "matched site," tha dif er d on ly
,eno or two, known dimens o . Matched cit es, unfortuna ely, do not
exist. And making a choi e fo the one or two char cterist c to match
fo forensic evid nce util zation, was an impos ibly dif cult decison.
Sel cting a broad range fo cit es se med the best res arch strategy for
answering the question fo whet r rates fo forensic evid nce util zation
dif erunder any cir umstances ro increas d from 5791 to 1981, in any
kind of locae.
-____--- -
-
files, howev r, rep sent the s i n g lm eo s t complet source of information
i.e., man er fo dispo it on, conviction sta us and sent c . For the
pur ose fo this tudy we made the as umption tha fi scientif c informa-
tion wer used in a prosecution, the case file should contain a copy
fo
provide by a survey fo the natio 's crime labor t ies. Among the
naire as es ing the various types of evid nce pres nted in the trial.
--
---- -en e r-g-i e s-o £a - t o b a4
-1-mi-r to si-eh
sociated with pres nti g or interp ting such evid nce ta jury and bench
trials.
Chicago. Hypothe ical case w re dev loped for sev ral dif er nt crimes
(atemp murde , rape, rob ery, burgla y) and strength of the various
types of evid nce was varied in a factorial design for each crime
.epyt
wer suf ic ent evid nce to prove proba le cause, like y mode of
-0-r-st age s-oLc c-lanim r as e-ad judi cat i e-rd a-no ss e _ y - b - d ,at d-fo epyLhca
Table 2.1 Types of Dat Col ect d*
S t a g e fo Adju icat on
He t hod
Case F i l eA n a l y s i -- X X X
Intervi ws with
Key Actors X X X X
Hypothetical
Case Scenarios X X X X
Jury Exit
Question aires -- -- X --
Report Organization
Chapter I1 Study S i t eD s c r i p t i o n s
The types fo evid nce as ociated with particular of ense categories and
the r sult of tes ing of dif er nt forms fo forensic evid nce are
reviwd.
discu ed, whic helps to place into contex the find gs of rates of
jury service wer asked to evalu te t h e videnc they had heard and
Chapter VI Conviction
Chapter IX C h a r g eR d u c t i o n a n d S e n t e n c e
gen rated via a set of hypothe ical case admin ster d to prosecutors
CHAPTER I1
Introduction
sy tems and crime labor t ies ni each of the six studie jurisd ct on .
The basic struc re of the crim nal courts a n d the flow of case throug
are also discu ed, including their physical and human resources, exam-
inat on cap bil t es and caselo d . nI ad it on, for each jurisd ction
the relationship betw n the crime labor t y and the court sy tem
si
which influenc decis on to examine evid nce and introduce scient fic
find gs in courts fo
.wal
Chicago/C k County
serious crimes ocur) and many fo its sub r . Co k County had 17,8
felony case fil ngs in 198, refl cting an increm ntal increas in
fil ngs from earli years. Ther a r e ap roximately 175 judges ni the
cir u t, 50 of whom hear crim nal case ; the s'eta s atorney's of ice
has about 04 at orneys, 571 of whom prosecut crim nal .se ac Ther
29
ohw syenrot a tnes rpe stneilc with charged .semirc Table S 3.1
rof
suoirav study
.setis
NOITCIDSIRUJ
se aC ynoleF
deliF
srotucesorP
cilbuP
sredn feD
.segduJ
lareneg(
)noitcidsiruj
)snoit sopsiD
yruJ
hcneB
mine whether and ta what lev -- felony ro misdem anor -- felony ar-
a l s o proce d by way fo grand jury ind ctmen , rather than a prosecut '
Polit cal case , conspiracy or white-col ar crimes, other hig ly vis ble
year, ap roximately 10 per crim nal court judge. Cor elatively, ther
are 0 0,3 or more bench trials an u l y, or about 06 per crim nal court
32
or 51-4 years for residential burgla y. Pres ntence investiga ons are
su pects and crime scen s orig nating ni the city of Chicago. This
police departmen 's Bureau of Technical Services, tub for years prio to
and si div de into two princ pal div s on : the vidence technic an
unit, which provides coverage to property crime scen s and les serious
crimes throughout the six major geographical areas of the city; and a
03
3
The evid nce technic an unit si also respon ible for a r a n g e of
kits and other evid nce from hospitals and the morgue to the crime
The labor t y itself rec ived about 26,0 case for examin t on
gather d, the evid nce si chan el d to ne ro more fo the five princ pal
tif c examiners ni the labor t y. Drugs consit ute about 40% of the
examin t ons. The firea ms section examined about 2,0 fired evid nce
E v i d e n c e Prio ties
crime labor t y si examind. Gen ral y, evid nce submis ions have
evidence wil be def r ed, only parti l y complet d, and in some case
nev r complet d dep ndi g upon the type fo evid nce submit ed and its
34
elbaT
3.2
yrota b L emirC
scit retcar hC etiS ydutS
NOITC DSIRUJ
airoeP *TC
ETUBIR A ogacihC )notroM( naK ytiC dnalk O nedir M
/tegduB atip C
92.$
Law tnem crofnE
d e v r Ss e i c n g A 23 1
baL renimaxE
026,61
latoT baL daoles C
145,1-
lanosreP
%83
ytrepo P
%26
sgurD 0%;':
:>
IWD %0
rehtO %0
latoT /se aC
baL renimaxE - 140
cnu~'" t i 2sa-d eno t a t e - I d e n t i f i - c a t i m B u r e a u tnu i 1 gnirud ,97 1 hci w
scit lanim rc emit se ac det imbus er w ot eht FBI
.yrotarobal
For drug case , the an lysi must eb complet d in time for the
unexamined. About %03 fo burglary and rob ery evidence si not an lyzed
nor si 50% fo evidence col ect d from as ult . Although al rape kit
evidence rec ives a prelim nary evaluation and as e m nt, only about 5%
of case are ful y examined and repo t d. On the other hand, more than
%59 fo biol gical/trace evid nce from homic deldeath investiga ons
are many other factors whichmodify this princ ple, such as the
-es
the evid nce, the scient s ' own as es ment fo the evidence and its
tion to the point wher a growing percentage fo case are not evalu ted
3 6
time lapse betw n the submis ion of the videnc and sti an lysi ,
and reports are pre a d princ pal y for the ben fit of the prosecutor
and the court. As backlog ed evid nce conti ues to mount, prosecutors
may find thems lves withou a labor t y repo t sa they ap roach a trial
date; In such ase ti wil be the prosecutor who specif cal y requ st
request for an lyse made to the microan lysi section of the Chicago
pres of case and the resource lim ta ions of the laborty. The
case.
the an lysi must be complet d in time for the prelim nary hearing.
--- -- -
-
she ts to se which case are scheduled for court action and, con-
sequ ntly, which should rec ive top pior ty. Withou a laboratory
repo t av ilable ni drug prosecutions, the judge wil like y dism the
.esac
case investiga ors and sta e' at orneys. Reports wil be made
ers which are wel rec ived. Nev rthel s , most public def nders view
the laboratory as being aligned with the prosecution and examiners not
ful y ac es ibl .
tis a n d prosecutors (se Chapter VI). In most pleas and trials, then,
the labor t y repo t serves a the an lyst' "tes imony" wher the
repo t si read into the r cord by the sta e' at orney and si stipulated
yb the d fense at orney. Wher examiners are asked to tes ify, they
t w e nt h e lab and the Sta e's At orney's Ofice. Sta e's at orneys
homic des, ).cte may have quite dif er nt perc ptions fo forensic
they ave regular conta. Overal , the labor t y gen ral y enjoys a
go d reputa ion among sta e's at orneys, although some are quick
ot
point out tha result may not be "stae-ofhr, given the long
Peoria County
County courts in 198 (Se Table 3.1). Ther are 15 ful -time judges in
major crimes. Six as istant (part-ime) public def nders are as igned
six fo the judges are el cted as "resid nt" judges from their home
39
counties -- two from Peoria County and one from each fo the o r four
and judges in the Tenth Circu t are often rota ed betw n court m
tional jurisdiction, are sel cted yb the ful Circu t judges from a
tsil
of ap lic nts. While cir u t judges are lect d for a six-year term,
Caseflow
cul s out case with weak evid nce and other shortc mings. The remain-
gni case are pas ed to a grand jury, whic considers the evid nce and
jury in nearly al felony case, ra ely reso ting to prelim nary hear-
fic ent way to det rmine whic case to bind over to felony court.
Case tha survi e the scre ni g proces are tes on the trial
def nse at orney. Thre -qua t rs of the trials are befor juries. In
--
198 , about two- hirds of the felonyconvictions resulted ni prison or
det rminate sy tem rec ntly enacted by the Il ino s Sta e Legislature.
theadjudication proces.
departmen 's gen ral services div s on. This unit was expande and
crime scen unit investigated the scen s fo about 0 7,2 crimes ni 198 ,
phot graphs of crime scen s and ac idents; clas if es and files fin-
gerp ints; searches thes files and compares fingerp int cards with
laten prints dev loped ta crime scen s; and transports physical evi-
___
- ~y~ no-e3
- h t - s - i a i r o e oP - n ~ - 1 - o n - i - 1 - 1 - , juiisdsdiZtS6Fi~
he s t udy ni ch whi
.selif
14
The Morton labor t y si about ten miles to the east fo Peoria nd
labs with the eight a group fo co rdinators who staf the train g and
chemistry, blo dstains, hairs and fibers, firea ms and to lmarks, arson
ac el rants, paint an lysi , laten fingerp ints and the polygraph (Se
*
ment submit ing 31 of thes .se ac Dangerous drugs co&tiue more
Evidence Priorit es
rato y and evid nce scre ni g procedur s fol owed by the police
Chapter )V .
The crime scen unit fo the Peoria Police Departmen si a smal
6(
,)rebm wel -trained and highly motivated group of evid nce techni-
cise greater discretion ta scen s of crimes in sel cting evid nce for
The crime scen unit also col ects and identif es al fingerp ints
phot graphs. Fingerp ints consti ute a major portion of the evidence
come, first served" basi , ke ping in mind the other gen ral priority
be col ected, packaged andmarked, and condit ons which have to be met
wil not be an lyzed unles blo d samples arealso submit ed from vic-
Prosecutor Priorit es
evidence and sup lying results, prosecutors are seldom faced with having
---
de aPnse Ti-temo~ tra-s ecma- to ac om odate the laboratory in completing
vestigator in charge of the case and the Sta e's At orneys Of ice.
charging exc pt for case fo drug pos e ion. The smal size fo the
crime laboratory and sta e' at orneys' staf s prom tes personalized
(se Chapter .)Iv Face-to f contacts betwe n the prosecutor and the
lab scient s are the norm befor trial during which timethe
questioni g is revi w d.
the As i tan Stae's At orneys wil not purposeful y mislead the court
44
noskcaJ/ytiC sa n K County,
iruos iM
with sti truoc tiucr nwo .snois vid ehT ytirojam (63%) fo ynolef
dna
,ytnuoC htiw eht gnieb gni amer delif ni et alP (17%) dna Clay
-nuoC
.seit The se ac delpmas rof eht yduts morf detc les r w eht
noskcaJ
tna cilbup
.sredn fed
erutc S fo eht
struoC
eht ht61 . t c i r s D i lr au o cs i d uM J a sh t r u o cd e r i t - o w t
metsy
Caseflow
The courts fo Jackson County suf er from the same lack oE resources
as the courts ni most metrop litan are s. The ef ic ent use fo thes
ar est case. The number fo case tha qualify for the fil ng of sta e
Sent ce prog am. Non-vilet first of end rs, who qualify, have ar est
bound over for trial by an As ociate Circu t Court Judge. Ther wer
1g 9r 8a n d jury ind ctme s. Of the 407,1 case bound over for trial,
verdicts .
The Mis ouri Legislature pas ed into law ni 197 (taking ef ct
.naJ 1, 197) a revis d crim nal code. The code div es felonies into
the pos ible penalties tha can be imposed for each clas of ofens.
tsrif e rg d si a Clas A
.ynolef
en cS mirC and
secivr S scit lan m rC
Mis ouri from its inception in 1973 to 1983, has rec ntly moved to a
crime categories whic si exc ptional y hig. The Kans City Regional
Evidenc Priorit es
More than 90% fo homic de, drug and narcoti , and fraud/counterf it
of ag rav ted as ults, arson and rapes are examin d, tub slightly
few r than half of the rob e i s. Only about one-quart of the evi-
- -
investiga ve div sion has given the case. In this way, the as e m nt
pos ible si integrated with the knowledge the investigator has about the
ned to case and the examiner revi ws the videnc in tha orde.
burgla y, rob eryand ag rav ted as ult, ther must eb su pects iden-
Prosecutor Priorit es
inat ons cur ent with ongoing investigations of crimes, result are
arsons, rapes -- until result are rec ived from the .bal Prosecutors
negotiations with def ndants until they rec ive the result of labo-
Staf ing pat erns in both the prosecutor's of ice and the crime
laboratory are stable and the relationship betw n scientif c and lega
prosecut ' comf rt with ind vi ual examiners and knowledge fo the
Reports is ued by the crime laboratory are directed to the rel vant
tors may also tel phone laboratory examiners to learn fo prelim nary
Unlike some other prosecutor of ices in our study, the Jackson County
def nse at orneys without wait ng for a court .red o Prosecutors wil
us al y confer with exp rts ni person before trial unles they are
famil ar with the scientist and the vidence from previous prosecutions.
and fo thes only about one in ten (se Chapter )IV have an exp rt
tes ify.
ni sti roi epuS truoC nois v D dna 13 lapic num ,segduj 14 fo mohw
era
erutc S fo the.Cours
Felony are s l a i r t detcudnoc ylno yb eht ,struoc roi epus hguo tla in
51
Althoug munic pal court judges are el ct d, partisan polit cs are
t hmeuys stand for el ction ta the next gen ral el ction. Ap ointments
turnover whic ensure a crim nal bench with considerable tenure and
stabil ty.
Superio court judges rota e betwe n civ l, crim nal, and probate
mat ers, frequ ntly serving in one cap city for sev ral years before
rota ing ot another servic . The majority of the superior court judges
jury which wil hear tes imony. Upon the return of an ind ctmen , the
- -- -
yam tna enimaxe-s orc se ntiw and tnes rp ecn div ro ynomitse ni
sih
eviaw eht yranim lerp .gniraeh tI si osla for ae quit esn f d eht
ot
es ht case era neht dnuob revo ot eht roi epuS ad m lA Court rof
-rec
mrofinu era secn t hguo tla for ,semirc ekil the metsy alows
daorb
laic duj .noitercsid roF yralg ub ,elpmaxe e h tn i tsrif
e rged
en cS emirC dna
secivreS scit lanim rC
si rehto morf euqin dei uts snoitc dsiruj ni tah cif tneics
len osrep
gurd and cito ran .daolkrow The yletamixorp a del nah yrota b l 2,340
-
se ac htiw ,189 ni ---- the-great-major-i-t-y-of-th-esFm beiIg-inthe saer
54
seit roi P ecn divE
tnirp eg se ac d e t s u q e r y l a c i f e p s r a y e h tc i w ot ;enimax
tub
siht stne rpe ylno tuoba %06 fo detc psu gurd ecn div dezi s dna
40%
.stnirp egnif
sA ndie t o eht cisneroF trope ydutsreil ae ecn divE and eht Police,
sepyt fo ecn dive det imbus ot eht si ylan rof yrota b l era
yl autc
eht nevig ytiro p o t .si ylan rof det imbus ecn dive dna se ac
ehT
gories wil be based on the perishabil ty of the evidence and the order
in which the request are rec ived by the laboratory. tI ap ears tha
Prosecutor Priorit es
high percentage of felony fil ngs resulting in guilty pleas %58( plus)
ti may take to obtain a lab report and are vocal in the ne d for ad ed
.ecn r Stil , the staf fo the Oakland labor t y has an excel ent
tes ify ni the very serious case which result in trial. The Oakland
information with def nse at orneys and their exp rts. The laboratory
enjoys a go d reputa ion among the def nse bar, which expres es con-
The sta e fo Con ecti u has six counties and thirte n judic al
distr c s. The sta e crim nal courts handle ap roximately 120, 0 case
a year. Ther are 13 sta es at orneys (one for each judic al distrc),
court -- the only sta e ni the unio to do so.) Ther are, excluding
probate court judges, 130 superior court judges ni the sta e. Judges
.erut TheC ief Justice fo the Suprem Court has overal responsib lity
The crim nal courts fo orig nal jurisdiction i Con ecti u have
so-cal ed "part "A and "part "B courts. T h e dist nc ion betw n part A
and part B courts varies in dif er nt are s fo the sta e, tub si based
maxi um penalties, and are someti s cal ed "J.D." courts rof( "Judic al
to the "care crim nal" progam. T h e Part B court in New Haven has 6
ful -time and 1 part-ime prosecutors staf the Part B courts in West
orig nate from the city of New Haven. Ap roximately 20, 0 case ent r
,tcir s d gnikrow eno ni traP A dna owt gnikrow ni traP .B ehT traP B
fO eht 4,000 r o so gnihcaer se ac eht roi epus truoc rep year, 100-200
wolfesaC
courts, esuaceb eht sah metsy ne b der tla ylacido rep ecnis sti
-pecni
.)stcirtsid
,).cte and si partly because points of law become more signif cant in
them.
tmen also take and dev lop phot graphs and perform comparisons
fo
fingerp ints, tol and firea ms evid nce and other "impres ion"
evid nc .
labor t ies in the sta e ton( including the Medical Examiner's Of ice,
which si cal ed ni for case of su pic ous or violent .)htaed The Sta e
Police Laboratory ni Meriden rec ives much fo the vidence from major
-- -
crimes, tub does not handle drug ro blo d alcoh l evid nc . Al such
evid nce, including some tradit onal crim nalistics evid nce, si sent to
60
fI a rojam emirc sruc o ni snwot rehto e h tn a h t City fo New
nevaH
gnid ops ot tner f id eciloP eta S .stcirtsid l A der voc ecn div
yb
eciloP
.yrotarobal
rehto ecn div (e.g., ,sniat do lb semn, ,tniap ,riah fibers, etc.)
saw
dna 13 nrows )ecilop( ,srenimaxe and niht w eht tsap sraey ruof
sah
tuoba 30 ,srenimax e rht ylno fo mohw are truoc ,deif lauq eht -niamer
Evidence Priorit es
fact tha this facil ty examines no drugs and narcotics (whic are
ber d tha in 198 , the enha ced cap bil t es of the Meriden labor t y
firearms and physical matching examin t ons which also reduces the flow
evidence cur ent with ong i police investiga ons. This also refl cts
dence submit ed, the av ilabil ty of stand r s from su pects and the
noituces rP
seit roi P
setai n eht noitan m xe fo eht htiw ecn dive sti nois mbu ot
eht
srot hcaorp a a truoc rieht dnif dna etad elif gnikcal a bal trope
dna
de a
.snoitan m xe
New The ecif o nevaH sah eht noita uper rof gnieb erom
nahtevis erg a
decu orp stlu er cif t, s i hytb yrota b l dna eht der f o ynomitse
yb
noitac um oC fo
stlu eR
63 ?
si ot ke s ehtuo sleauc i s y h p dna ot
y r o t a b l e t a i r p o e r u bs
reviw eht
.ecnedive
n e b v a h s e y l a n y r o et a h wb l .demrof ep The
y r o nt ea d i b Ml
dnep upon eht FBI )yrotarobaL wish and ot esicr x rieht evitagor p
ta
and thePolice (pet rson te al., 1984) f o r a ful discus ion of such
CHAPTER
VI
Introduction
a sample fo prosecutor case files in 1975, 1978 and 198 ni each fo the
o Result fo labor t y tes ing (as oci t ve, dis ociat ve, identif cation)
A op e a r n c e of exp rt ta trial
Method of Ap roach
Dat from a r ndom sample fo felony case fil ngswer exp cted to
help achiev two of the prima y aims of the study: to establish rates
fo usage fo scient fic evid nce and to det rmine the ef cts fo this
dat source tha contai ed information about the evid nce gather d by
- -- - A -
char cterist c of the d f n a t and "sy tem proces ing" char cterist c
76
sent ce. For the purpose fo this s t u d yw e made the as umption tha
fi
recognize tha suchan as umption may lead to the incor ect categor-
case wher the scientif c result are pivotal ni decid ng case outcme.
case files from thre calendar years: 1975, 1978 and .189 The year
1975 repres nted the earliest year for al six study jurisdictions wher
crime laboratory, police and prosecutor records wer stil intac and
disposit on dat wer av ilable (dat wer col ected from thes case
charges had be n brought ag inst a def nda t dna the charges had be n
result, case ni which police had made a felony ar est and the prosecu-
tor declined to file charges, ro wher the prelim nary hearing judge had
dismis ed the case for lack of proba le cause, are not include in the
sample.
The decis on to sample case at this stage and not, for example, at
the point of police ar est, was made aftervis ts to our various study
locations and discus ions among the project staf and advisory com it-
86
.e t We wer influenc d by the fact tha ours was a study fo forensic
jurisdiction and may rec ive ar est case from sev ral dif er nt police
We wer also encouraged to construct our sample from case tha had
res archers, such as Rosenthal and Travnecik ,1479 ( wer les than
smal percentage fo police case in which such evidence si col ected and
case prior to a prelim nary hearing tha our sample fo case with
case files in each study site. For the year 198 , we doubled this
number and set out to examine 1,0 randomly drawn felony case in each
the entir po ulation fo felony case fil ngs in New Haven and
1,0 case objectiv . In our other locati ns, we had more than e ough
Computer gen rated random numbers wer used t o sel ct the files
for each jurisdiction, fo course, not only because fo dif ering case
numbering sy tems tub also due to vari nces in to al caseload .ezis For
example, in Chicago we had to sel ct our sample from about 10, case
Theunit of an lysi in our study si the def nda t charged with one
ar est and chargin of thre d fenda ts, we tracked only one (randomly
ind ctme or information, our dat col ectors would eith r flip a coin
The Case
samples drawn from calend r year 1891 in the six jurisd ctions. violent
Table 4.1
City
Kansas New
Chicago Oakland City Peoria Haven Litchfield
Offense 11x990 n=955 ~ 8 9 4n=1057 111442 n=234
Murder 6% 2% 2% 1% 4% 0%
Att. Murder/
Agg. Asslt 8% 8% 5% 12% 4% 0%
and Oakl nd )%13( than in Kans City ,)%72( Litchfield )%42( and Peoria
higher than verag perc ntage of rapes (around ,)%51 compared to about
)%62( than t h e r main g jurisd ctions. Kans City has the gr ates
perc ntage fo burgla ies and thefts .)%75( Chicago and New H a v e nh a v e
six site for the thre years 1975, 1978 and .189 For five fo the
cit es, the fraction fo violent of ens si steady over this time pe-
crimes. For Kans City and Litchfield the perc nt violent crime
si
37% of the time in New Haven, 26% fo the time ni C h i c a g o and 21% of the
time in Oakl nd. Thes are the jurisdictions in whic violent crimes
(38% and 34% resp ctively) of charged of ense in Chicago and Oaklnd.
- - - -- - - - -
Firea ms are pres nt in 21% fo New Haven crimes, %81 of Chicago of ens
and 14% of Oakland crimes. Guns or other weapons are actu l y used in
%32 of the Chicago case , %02 fo New Haven charges and %71 of the
Oakland crimes.
created a new variable (seriou n s ) which incorp ates thes ind ca-
tions fo injury, pres nce and use fo weapons/guns and of ense type
exp cted, the thre jurisdictions having the great s number fo "se-
rious" of ense are, once ag in, New Haven, Chicago, and Oakl nd.
sy tem proces ing char cteristics fo our case sample. We are now ready
sampled case .
acknowledge tha the ap ear nce fo a laboratory repo t in the file does
p p - -- -
--
p p p p - - --- - - -
repo t p r e s n c e are fairly consi ten acros years and acros cites.
Chicago and Peoria, close to thir y perc nt of the case contain labo-
rato y repo ts. The higher rate for Peoria in 1975 si a reflection
fo
the other two time p riods, the rates are 19% and 17%, resp ctiv ly.
repo ts in 1975 and 1978, tub this drops to 26 perc nt in 198. Peoria
1975 ot 198 ; ni fact, in thre of the six jurisd ctions studie , the
type, we find considerable dif er nces among crimes and acros years
(Table 4.2). Thus, considering only the 198 dat, we se tha some
-- -- - - - - - A -- - - - - -
67
Table
2.4
Of ense 75 78 18 75 87 18 75 87 18 75 78 81 75 78 18 75 87
18
9 4 01 01 01 01
01
Murder 78 01 01 2 9 01
01
0 9 01 4 9 0 9 --
01
14 40 27 13 16 19
At ~urd/ 90 11 50 11 13
36
Ag taB t 10 01 19 90 0
20
2 8 83 25 6 1 24 3 3
Rape 4 6 42 0 6 54 2 4
63
87 35 5 1 46 41 3 1
50 40 19 70 15 12
Rob ery 30 19 80 16 12
13
2 0 2 2 01 11 80
17
15 25 16 03 1
53
Burglary 12 35 52 5 3 20
34
13 3 1 19 2 1 01
04
17 40 80 2 33
80
Theft 20 41 13 13 14
71
50 17 . 90 50 0 3 0
94 69 9 7 89 79 98
Drugs 90 8 1 01 I00 86
01
_ 7 9 - __
9 3
-
8 9_ ___ -
89
- 78 2 7 _ __
repo ts sa wel as autopsy and toxicol gy results from the medical
murde and drug case , Labor t y reports are next most likely for
the rape files. Overal , labor t y reports are pres nt next most
report; ni New Haven about .%71 Kansa City, Litchfield and Oakland
have laboratory eports pres nt ni about %01 of rob ery case , but
Chicago has laboratory repo ts for rob eries only about 2% of the time.
At empted murders and ag rav ted as aults are compar ble to rob eries,
with laboratory eports pres nt about 10% to 20% of the time. Kansa
City and New Haven are thejurisdictions wher laboratory reports are
Over the 1975- 8 period, the p rcent fo murders and drug case
murder case files. The rate fo laboratory reports for at empted murder/
ag rav ted bat ery case , si gen ral ydeclin g (excpt for Peoria and
New
.)nevaH
Peoria nd Kansa City rates have increased and in Oakland and Litch-
tsom yleki ot wohs esa rcnia (a tluser fo egd lwonk desa rcni
tuoba
,ecn div tub srehto di ton ,egnahc ro decu r nev rieht ycneuq rf
fo
ecn dive cif tneics ni seiralg ub era tahwemos ydaets revo eht
e rht
.doirep
(n = 245)
Importance of
Forensic Evidenc
Homic de
3.4
Rape
Hit a n dR u n
Arson
8.2
Burglary
2.6
Rob ery
2.3
Larceny
0.2
sum arized in Table 4.4. Only those forensic evidence ategories which
are pres nt in 10% or more fo sel cted of ense types are include . Each
lI+ll
ind cates the pres nce fo an evidence type ni an of ens category
%01( or more of the time) ni a jurisd ction. Fingerp ints, for example,
gerp ints ap ear most often in burgla ies; ni 34% of such prosecutions
As forblo d and blo dstain evid nce, ti si found most consi tently
and New Haven. Blo d tes results are found next most often in rape
prosecutions, wher blo d si drawn from the victim dna su pect for the
pur ose of comparing the blo d group fo the sem n don r and the s men
evid nce found in-the victm. Blo dstains may, also, eb used as evi-
denc ot( a les r ext n ) wher thSe vict m and/or su pect are injured
Chicago and oakl nd. In the at temp murde lag r vat ed bat ery prosecu-
tions, firearms are examined far les often -- ni only about 10% of
Table
4.4
Frequency of Oc ur ence
fo
Scientif c Evidence by Of ense Type"
tA tM u r d /
Blo d
Firearms
Sem n
Hair
Impres ions/
Imprints +
jurisd ct on .
Peoria wher this type fo evid nce ap ears ni half )e rht( of its ix
murde prosecuti n .
evid nce categories most frequ ntly examined and described in the labo-
rato y repo ts pres nt ni the case files. The first table for each site
second table displays the r sult of tes ing perfo med on the evid nce
sub tances and fingerp ints are the predomina t evid nce categori s.
- --
ehT- result are b oken int3-sS&x categor-i=;TnfOm
hci lweso t
as ociate )knil( the def n a t with the crime, to ones which contribute
categori s.
The increas d pres nce fo drug evid nce noted in the first tables
for e a c h s i t e also explains the increas from 1975 ot 198 ni the per-
crease ni drug an lyse -- the rate in 198 )%25( si almost double the
the same thre year period. Fingerp ints, for example, are repo ted as
198. With resp ct to the result fo tes ing perfo med on the evid nc ,
Table 4.6 ind cates tha the most c o m o n outc me si an identif cation of
a contr l ed sub tance. The "as oci t n" category, wher evid nce
50% decline from 1975 to .189 Again, this refl cts a reduc caseload
roF Peoria, Table 7.4 show tha drugs and fingerp ints c o m p r i s ea
sub tan i l porti n of the videnc examin d. Drug evid nce shows a
sub tan i l decline from 1975 to 1978, a n d remains ta about the same
lev in .189 On thew ole, more firea ms, sem n and blo d evid nce
si
being reported to prosecutors in 198 than in 1978, tub the sreblpun are
48
Table
5.4,
Chicago
Evidence Category
Drugs
Firearms 13% 9 % 7 %
Blo d 9 % 6 % 5%
Table
4.6
As ociates
Fails to As ociate
Reconstruction
Inconclusive
elbaT
7.4
Peoria
lacisyhP Evidenc
denimaxE
Drugs
stnirp eg F
smrae iF %81 5 % %1
Semn
do lB
elbaT
4.8
stlu eR fo
gnitseT yrota b L
sliaF ot etaicos A 4 % %1
n o i t a c f n e dv Ii t a g N %71
%7
noitcur s eR
evisulcno I
as ociations doubled from 1975 t o 198. Results which failed to find an
Tables 9.4 and 01.4 show tha the pat erns of evidence util zation
in Kansa City res mble those in Peoria nd Chicago. Drugs and fin-
gerp ints make up about 70% of the types of forensic evidence found in
the sampled case . We do find, howev r, tha the percent of case with
drug evidence si considerably les than the rates in the two Il inois
tions in Kansa City compared with the other jurisdictions. The rate at
with slightly les thanhalf ther sults fal ing into the "posit ve
clas if cation.
ined and reported in prosecutor case files is consi tent acros the
thre years. Drugs and fingerp ints are, ag in, the two most frequent
evidence categories, consti uting about thre -quarters of the evidence "
Table 21.4 rev als that the nature and distribution of laboratory
Table
9.4
Kansa City
Evidence Category
Drugs
Fingerprints
Firearms
Semen
Table 4.10
As ociates
Fails t Ao s o c i a t e 0% 9 % %4
Positive Identification 43% 4%
%74
Negative Identification
Reconstruction
Table
1 .4
Oak and
1
Top Five Evidence Categories Examined in
N = 17 N = 198 N = 246
Firearms 9 % 5% 3%
Sem n 7 % %7 9%
Blo d 3% 3 % 4 X
Table
21.4
As ociates
Fails to As ociate
Reconstruction
~Inco*.us i've---- - - -- -
Table
31.4
Litchfield
Evidence Category
Drugs
Fingerp ints
Firearms
Sem n
B 1 od
Table
41.
Reconstruction 1% 8 % 10%
Inconclusive 5 % 3 % 5%
ekam pu tuoba 85% e h tf o ecn dive cisnerof detroper ni eht delpmas
se ac
yrogetac tuobadn %01 ni eht "setaicos a" yrogetac rof( 5791 dna
1981).
In weN nevaH selbaT( 51.4 dna ,16 .4 sgurd dna stnirp egnif
-moc
esirp a ytirojam fo eht ecn dive cisnerof sepyt dnuof ni eht esac
.selif
,rev woH egatnecr p eht fo g u r d htiw se ac spord ecn dive morf tuoba 55%
have desa rcni morf 29% ot %14 elihw "snoitac fitnedi v tisop" have
,desa rcedyl aren g nehw 189 slev era derapmoc htiw 5791
.slev l
91
Table
51.4
New Haven
PhysicalEvidence Examined
Evidence Category
Drugs
Fingerprints
Firearms
Semen
B od
1
Table
61.4
Percent of Al LabResults
As ociates
Fails to As ociate
Negative Identification
Reconstruction
Inconclusive 7 %
Table 4.17 displays the ranki gs given various evid nce types by heads
Labor t y directors gen ral y agre tha drugs and fingerp ints are
most importan categories fo evid nce fol wed yb firea ms/to lmarks and
Tables 81.4 through 32.4 sum arize the result of labor t y tes-
ing for e a c h site on an evid nce specif basi. The number in pare-
thes ben ath thep rcentages in the tables cor esponds to the number
Given the infrequ ncy with w ich same videnc categories ap e r, per-
centages are pres nted only when five or more items of physical evid nce
Table 4.18 pres nt the evid nce specif result for Chicago.
ther si a decline in the most rec nt year survey d. Fingerp int evi-
198 , tub about two- hirds of the time in 1978. The rates of as oci -
tive result ni the blo dstain evid nce have steadily increas d from
identif cation for sem n si about %06 for the last two years fo the
identif cations in
.5791
PA Tab a c - i d1n i - 9 1 7 4 - e f i t n e d - i a f n t a r - e ht - t a h t - s e i-EStinOf su pect
de
drugs in Peoria si very high acros al years survey d. Although the
Table
71.4
n( = )142
Importance of Specif c
Evidenc Categories
Drugs
3.8
Fingerp ints
Firea ms
To lmarks
Ac el rants
Explosive
Fibers
Paint
Hair
Glas
Soi 1
Chicago
Evidence Category/
Drugs
Positive Ident.
Fingerprints
As ociation
Firearms
As ociation
Blo dstains
As ociation
Semen
Positive Ident.
As ociation
Table 4.19
Peoria
Drugs
Positive Ident. 79% 85% 89%
(1 48) (58) (167)
Fingerprints
~ssociation
Firearms
Association
Bloodstains
Association
Semen
Positive Ident.
Association
rate of as ociations for the fingerp t evid nce drops a tib in 198 ,
ti stil stands ta the 50% .lev For firea ms and blo dstains, ther
are so few case with thes types fo evid nce ni 1975 and 1978 tha the
an s ociation about two-hirds fo the time, and blo dstain about 40%
fo the .emit The s e m n evid nce category si notew rthy not because
fo
as ociat ve findgs. This ind cates tha the labor t y ton only
si
rev als the pr senc o f a contr l ed sub tance. Fingerp ints as ociate
the def nda t with the crime about thre -quarte s of the time in 1975
and two- hirds of the time ni .189 Firea ms evid nce rev als an
-sa
)%34( ni 1978 should be discounted due to the smal sample size. The
sample size for blo dstain evid nce are smal in 1975 and 1978, tub in
able )12.4 acros al thre years. Fingerp int as ociat ons are among
-- - -- - -- - -- - -
%56 to 75% of the .emit Although the numbers are very smal for fire-
9 7
Table 4.20
Kansa City
Evidence Category/
Drugs
Positive Ident.
Fingerprints
As ociation
Firearms
As ociation
Blo dstains
As ociation
Semen
Oak 1a n d
Evidence Category/
Drugs
Positive Ident.
Fingerprints
As ociation
Firearms
As ociation
Blo dstains
As ociation
Semen
Positive Ident.
As ociation
have increased over time. About half the sem n tes ing result are
10% fo case .
very high acros al years survey d. Sample size for other specif c
shows tha for New Haven, practical y ev ry drug an lysi rev als tha
the substance was contr l ed. Higher rates fo an lysi for sem n,
tion about thre -quarte s of the time, blo dstains 86% of the time and
Sum ary
in five fo the six jurisdictions studied in this res arch (~ew Haven
si
prosecutor case files. Lo king at specif c crimes rev als tha labo-
burglaries, rob eries, and at empt murderslag rav ted as aults and
evidence has increased ni more than one of ense category over the 1975-
10
Table 4.22
Litchfield
Evidence Category/
Drugs
Positive Ident.
Fingerprints
As ociation
Firearms
As ociation
Blo dstains
As ociation
Semen
Positive Ident.
As ociation
Table
32.4
New Haven
Evidence Category/
C
Drugs
Positive Ident.
Fingerprints
As ociation
Firearms
As ociation
Blo dstains
As ociation
Semen
Positive Ident .
As ociation
.stlu er
RETPAHC V
noitcud r nI
,-
ylrae
.s'0791
justice
.s ecorp
d n a s e i t l b a p c y r o t a b l e m i r cf o w e i v r o eht nosirapm c fo
ruo
.se ylan
dohteM
raeY
dehsilbat E
tnem calP lanoit z agrO
s'renimaxe
htlae cilbup/ fitne cs , ecif o s'r tuce o p ,secif o
sei ni ruo s~t dy ar~e units-of law en or-c ment ag c-i~s Foar- f the
head by a
. r e c i f oe c i l p
107
Figure
5.1
FREQUNCYMLATIV AND HISTOGRAM
FEQUNCY
ESTABLIHD
ORCM
Cumlative
Frequncy
Frequncy
Histogram
)2(
t C
920 52' 03' 53' 04' 54' 05' 5' 06' 56' 07' 57' 08'
58'
ESTABLIHD
YR
S e r v i cP o l e s andPrcties
prima ly serv e s( Table 5.1). Apart from the fdral labor t ies,
and ,)ogacihC owt are regional notr M( andKs ,)ytiC and one si a
c e n t r a l i z d s t a fe c i l y
.)tucitcen oC(
pres nt study tuci en oC( being the )noitpecx wil condut alyse
fo
901
Table
1.5
JURISDICTION SERVED
(n = 255)
County
Munic pal
Regional
Fed ral
Other (private,
- ~ ~ ~ p p ~ - p
n( = 255)
Munic pal 5 1%
County 54%
Regional 52%
o N d n u o fe r a s e c n r e f i d l a n o i t a z n g r o t n a c i f n g i s
- a r o b ga nl o m a
der o ot od so yb eht
.truoc
21
o tnecr p ytrihT fo eht seirota b l l iw ezylan
lanim rc-no
ecn dive selpma ,stnatul op( etc.) ,sedic tsep nopu
.tseuqer
esac yb case
.si ab
seit l caf elbis naht ruo lanoitan elpmas evah dna erom larebil
seic lop
yrota b L
stegduB
yletami sdriht-ow are denoit s p niht w wal .seicn ga tnem crofne The
detn serp a noit ni Table 5.3. The egar v laun tegdub for
es ht
t u o b a m o r f e s s e 0i r o ,t 4a 5 $b l ni 7 91 ot erom naht 0 , 9$
ni
.)esaercni
Table
5.3
7 91 and
1982'k
Budget
% Increase
" This table includes only those (no -fed ral) laboratories tha wer in
operation during the five year period from 7 91 to
,2891
and reported their budgets on the survey instrument.
Number fo Personl in
seirota b L
%05 fo eht evah seirota b l 6 ro rew f cif tneics ,len osr p %52 dna fo
htiw ,seirot 7 egar v ,se yolpm eht tsew f rebmun fo cif tne s
-rep
s'dnalk O y l n o s y l p m he c i w
6.
with eta s main seit l caf gnisaercni rieht f ats cif tne s yb an
Munic pal 31 14
County 8
1
Regional
Fed ral 1 18
Mean
Case
secit arP noita m xE
sdaole c yrota b L
71
Table 5.5
n( = 257)
Drugs
%39
Sem n 81%
Blo dstains
Fibers
Hairs
Ac el rants
Paint
To lmarks
Firea ms
Glas
1A coh 1
Explosive
Fingerp ints
Documents
Toxic logy
Polygraph
Voicepr nts
egar v (12%), eht tneloiv emirc daolesac for lapic num seirota b l
si
rehto ,em rtx eht emirc tn lo v sdaolesac for dna ytnuoc lared f
-obal
yl aitn sbu era seirota rewol naht eht .naem egatn cr p rewol hT
fo
e c n d i v e t a l r - e m i tr nc e l o i v in lared f seirota b l si a
noitcelf r
sdnop er c e n div etal r with yl aitn sbu rewol egar v naht DWI
91
Table
6.5
B R E A K O U T FO CASELOAD
YB
JURISD CTION SERVED
n( = 1,2349)
E v i d e n c e Examined
Property Crime 25 6 10 1 13 24
51
Drugs 32 04 41 40 1 5 5
14
DWI 20 36 15 34 18 0 2 3
Total 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
Sta e-Main )M-tS( and Sta e-Satel ite )taS- ( facil t es.
laboratories' caseloads. The fed ral laboratories and sta e-satel ite
our survey. With respect to sta e-satel ite laboratories, many came
the drug abuse problem. DWI case also constitute a major portion
fo
crime laboratory caseloads, with county and sta e-main facilities having
the highest percentage (36% and 34% respectively) of such case . When
drug and DWI case are combined we se that practical y thre -fourths of
sta e-main laboratory and county caseloads fal into this category. Our
main state facility (Con ecticut) does not fit this mold in that
ti
state agency i nC o n e c t i c u t .
We, also, computed the ratio of case examined per scientist for
cases per examiner per year. Municipal and county laboratories have the -
highest ratio of cases per examiner. The lowest caseloads are found in
For our study site laboratories Chicago 025( case /examiner) and
Kansas City 394( case /examiner) have the ighest case per examiner
Table
5.7
)2891(
Munic pal
County
Regional 24
9542
Fed ral 02
1281
Mean 34 3
64
seirot nd oe s a b ( epyt fo noitc dsiruj )devres la fo ruo
etis yduts
sdaol rep
.renimaxe
Technol ~i a
hcraes R dna snoitavon I
evah . t n a t r o ps m i n e b e r a s e t i y d u t s l a u d i v rn ui O ni
tnem rga
agin, ruo . s n o i t a
d ns e m o cp esr h t cO u s t r o p u s s e i r o t a b l
yram uS
321
.stceps r The owt ot oitar en fo nrows ot nrows f ats sah
deniamer
ylevita r
.tnatsnoc
, y l g n i d r o c a ; d e t a c i x o ln h w g n i v r d a s g u r d ylno tuoba
driht-eno
o s le ar w s e i r o t a b L r i e ht u o b ad e k s a
hcraes ni t em vlo ni
have yrs five ne b the in dleif of .ygol res When deksa wher
yeht
detov ot siht
.ytiv ca
NOTE
No. 1, 10-23.
RETPAHC
IV
noitcud r nI
stage fo esac
.noit sopsid
Chargin
dluow ecn div eb tna ropmi u ylevita r in nois ced ht gnic eulf
fo
721
. e c n e d i vl ea c i s y h p a w d a h y e h l -
ta tA siht egats fo eht
laic duj
s r o t u c e s o r p o s , m e ht u o i w d r a w o f l iw e g r a h tc o n tuoh iw eht
-nerof
rape esac si eno fo tnes oc ,sey"( saw er ht ,esruoc tni tub she
saw
noit taht ehs saw decrof ot ega ne ni esruoc etni yam eb yrev
tnatropmi
We asked prosecutors fi the lab repo t was sought and used ni plea
they thoug t they could get a plea withou a laboratory work-up, they
would not requ st one. Inde d, lim ta ions on lab testing in Chicago
and Oakland meant tha certain an lyse are not conducted unles a case
- prosecutor su pects the test might exonerate the def nda t. Whatev r
the reason, results are com onlyunav ilable to the prosecutor ro( the
tha they would want to consider pos ible laboratory eports befor
would delay the in tiation of plea negotiations until they rec ived
negotia ons.
eht nois ced ot ref o ,aelp srotucesorp dias taht yeht der isnoc
a
reywal dna noita uper h/si gniog rof ot ,lairt s'tnad ef d eht
roirp
fo htiw detaicos a ecn dive eht .esac ecniS ecn dive cisnerof si
trap
fo eht ,esac it sah an ,tcapmi tub sti tcapmi sdnep d nopu eht
rehto
ylgnortS ecn dive cisnerof vita cos a yam dael eht esn f d yenrot a
ot
hope taht l iw rotucesorp eht ref o yna .snois ecnoc A aelp kciuq
ot
eht na- egrahc nois mda fo s'eno tliug ot eht si- egduj eht
epoh ylno
noitcuder a rof ni
.ecn t es
131
erocs dnu ytil b s op eht y e ht a t gnoleb ot somen rehto
e hn ta
.egrahc
lairt-e P Discovery
desu ni aelp eht snoita gen .s ecorp elihW genraly eht discovery
.elbarevocsid era hguo tlA ton ylidaer denrut revo ot esn f d counsel,
132
pos es ed the evidence in the first place, and was required to turn
ti
and ac ompanying reports over to def nse who then had further
examinations performed on .ti Such a pos ib lity wil deter some de-
fense counsel from se king their own exp rt for a second opinion about
that ti wil "tip their hand" to the prosecution about their principal
client.
In our study sites def nse counsel indicated to us that they found
Trial
lairt e s( retpahC
.)vI
fo o g h c i w s e a yc r l g u b a ot tub lairt ni %3 fo
er hw slairt hcus
evidnc si
.denimaxe
(perc ntages)
City
Crime
Type Peoria Chicago Kan City
Murder
At. ~urder/
Ag. Bat.
Rape
Burglary
Theft
Rob ery
Drugs
tpme ta detav rg / ed um snoitucesorp y et ab gnio ot lairt evah
a
robey num, e t ar h g i y l t h g i s a e v h s n o i t u c e r p fo
trepx
larev s e a rc
.dlof
13% f o eht 56 sanK nislart City dna ylno 2% fo eht 273 slairt ni
es ht ylediw tner f id ,setar yeht are ylba orp detal r ot eht emulov
fo
len osr p ecilop ohw del nah l iw ecn dive ht evah ot eb del ac
.osla
tpecxE for ylraen ,ogacihC al eht slairt taht ruc o ruo ni study
ekam dluoc few tuoba skrame se nop r laic duj ot cisnerof ecn dive
dna
ot a .yruj fI eht judge si rail m f trepx htiw dna eht ecn div
ot
take the sta e' case "more seriously" if the prosecutor pres nt physi-
When exp rts are cal ed, ther si the beli f tha judges may
eb
more discrim nating and crit cal fo forensic testimony than a jury would
.eb Compared with a "novice juro , experienced judges wil have had
Such rep ated exposure enable judges to evaluate bet r the strength of
the evidence and the tes imony fo an exprt. In fact, some prosecutors
noted tha certain judges can becom quite crit cal of labor t y per-
son el and urge tha theyb come "more prom t and more profes i nal".
overal trial strategy, then def nse at orneys beli ve, strategical y,
the case should be tried befor a jury. Judges are not thought to be as
mistr al.
Jury Evaluation
talking about
.ti
Ther si the b lief tha juries "love to play ' evitce d and physi-
cal evid nce ful i s tha desir . The impact fo physical evid nce on a
tel vis on
.)wohs
fingerp int.
Prosecutors also beli ve tha physical evid nce can help "anchor
al the . .emit Quincy has given us a bad run," remarked one prosecu-
.rot Juries may eb disap ointed tha the forensic evidence di not
yield more conclusive information and surmise tha the prosecution has
-
at-orney
:d eton
can eb critaly
:tnatropmi
Comprehnsi
Jury
eht emirc
".en cs
ralu ;nosrep ylno taht eht dna niats denoits uq eht do lb fo eht
desuc a
tnecr p fo the
.noitalupo
dna reht go la ecn div gnisab rieht nois ced rehton ni srotcaf
eht
.esac
Defns
segn l ahC
t-o-have-phy s-i-c
e-1 ~ * ned-iv 1 a d-nzdmisi1t o r ge nu dsthx-iri s ,
defense at orneys, alike, agre such at empts are rarely suc es ful.
Table 6.2 displays our dat from the prosecutor case file sample
City. Such filings are suc es ful, ,.e.i the evidence is excluded, in
pered by the fact that the result of t h em o t i o n s to sup res could not
trial. The defense at orney can chal enge the competency of the expert
witnes when the trial court makes its review of the witnes ' qual-
with most examiners from the crime laboratory since these experts'
oc asions.
The defense may chal enge the forensic evidence by introducing its
is probably true.
The typical $50 /day for testimony and $150/hour for examinations
means that most public defender of ice's budgets can ot withstand such
Table
6.2
MOTIONS TO SUP RES EVID NC *
Jurisd ction
Yes 1 13 3 5
62 7
Granted
toN, Granted
Unk own
N o 98 8 7 79 95 74 3
9
exp nse - exc pt under the most extraordinary condit ons. Public
def nders have the option of going befor the court to peti on for a
special budgetary al owance to permit such tes ing, but most judges are
prosecution forensic exprt. During cros -examination the def nse may
complex. Def nse counsel wil imply tha no one can trus or real y
direct examination to clarify the situa on. As one def nse at orney
proba lis tic evidnc." Prosecutors gen ral y fe l tha thes def nse
tactics are uns c es ful. If, howev r, the forensic evidence involves
duce other points of view and alternative explan tions. In this situa-
As a prosecutor noted:
. trihs ..
cros -examin t on since they have past experience with the crime lab and
understand how other interp eta ions are inde d pos ible.
ylra ucit p ,esac 'noituces rp wher eht gni amer s' ta key
-sentiw
The noituces rp tsum deci how laicur siht ecn div o st i reh/sih
esac
.yruj
dna yeht dias ,et virp wer deifs ta taht detn serp stlu er ht yb
eht
s en vitc f E fo
strepxE
--
--
deralc y lasrevinu srotuce P taht s en vitc f e ht fo a
-nerof
541
thoug t tha unles a prosecutor understands the forensic evid nce,
can ot know the questions ot ask to bring tuo the tes imony ef ctively
testimony ni the re-dict. One prosecutor rema ked :tah fI" ther
was something tha I di n't understand, then proba ly the jury wouldn't
understand ti eith r, and only after talking to the crim nalist for
hours and hours ]di [ I begin to real y understand what was going
on.''
exp rt for court, they say the scient s also has the responsib lity
ot
understandable terms.
in slightly more than lf the case wher an exp rt tes if es. Wher
labor t y. More com nly, thoug , confer nces wil be held over the
purpose si the same: to ensure tha the scient s wil be pres nti g
the expected results and wil be able to explain the results ni a way
--
o Examiners ne d go d s c i e n t i f c c r e d n t i a l s ,w h i c h includes
tes imony.
o Examiners should not argue with def nse counsel, tub permit
Ther also si consensu among the crim nal def nse bar tha other
theywil be impres ed by
.mih
such a superfic al basi sa the exp rt's ap ear nce ro convincing man-
.ren Nonethel s , the impact fo the exprt's style can eb turned oc-
aspects of the case. For instance in a rape case, fi the def nse
si
with the of ens . Thus, fingerp ints are more highly regarde than
first group rema k tha they are always delighted with forensic evi-
denc. They find other types fo evid nce, at some lev , open to ques-
glue tha binds other evidence toge h r, not thek ystone fo the
.esac
NOTES
Save Kans for City and the Peoria )notroM( laborties whic ,
particul
.esac
R EIT PVA H C
Introduci
presntd vic
. l a i tr
f o ecnatropmI
ecn divE cisneroF
egatS ni lanim rC s ecorP ecitsuJ )eulavnaem( 9:
lairT
gnic et S
1.7
OF LABORATORY RESULTS
n( = 253)
Understanding the
Signif cance of
Laboratory Result
(mean value) *
Prosecutors
Judges
Police Of icers
Juro s
types fo evid nc .
Method fo Ap roach
complet question aires (se Ap endix )4.I X ta the close of trials and
sit for more than one trial ta any one time. Juro s impanel d to
Each fo the thirty crim nal court judges sit ing in t h me a i n crim-
inal courts complex was contacted as we rec ived notif cationhe or she
was about to begin a jury trial. We asked permis ion of the judge, and
often prosecutor and def nse at orney, to admin ster the question aires
to the juro s ta the close fo the trial. With few exceptions, most
judges and at orneys wer agre able to our .nalp Wher ver pos ible, a
me ber fo the project staf would sit through the trial and the pres-
enta ion fo evidence by the prosecution and def nse. Staf lim ta ions
and logist cal problems (two trials proce ding simultaneously) often-
times prev nted us from achieving this objective, howev r. Fol owing
the delivery and ac eptance of the jury's verdict, the judge would
introduce a me ber fo our res arch staf . The stafme ber would ask
yaw tuo fo
.mo rt uoc eht
ehT
se aC
tuo
.emoc
.degrahc
gni rec oC eht sro uj ,sevl m ht 54% wer elam f and 46% .elam
( 5 ) Cntrlled Substnce 2
(7) WU 1
(8) Burglary 1 1 /O 5
%2
%7 were 56 or older. In other words, about half of our juror sample was
under the age of 40. This is the extent of personal dat we wer able
to col ect about juro s. The unit of an lysi employed in this chapter
of phot s, fol owed by weapons related evidence (guns, bul ets, knives),
of ense (se Chapter ,)VI fingerp int evidence was not introduced in any
of the trials.
sto d ti about as wel as the other evidence, and only %4 said they
751
gnid ats fo ecn divelacigol ib ,sniatsdo lb( )nem s dna a re o p
naht
evital R ecnatropmI fo
ecn divE cisneroF
said eht dluowtcidrev ne b vah eht .emas dluow ret auq-enO have
yletamixorp A %26 of e r hd t v e i l b s t n e d o p s e r ot eb
smrof larev s
dna 16% a nois efnoc nois mda ro yb eht .tnad ef d Ther era few
epar
.se ac
,"sey" 27% detic hci w ecn div eht deliaf sne d ot produce,
e.g.,
more dna noitag sevni del at an l arevo "ret b" prosecutin fo the
case. Some juro swished tha they could h a v e k n o w n t h e def nda t's
prio crim nal recod. Other juro s asked for "more witnes es" withou
specifying for w h i c h s i d e t h e yw r e ne d .
which em rges from thes four questions si tha forensic evidence re-
case for which evidencehad be n examin d. Thus, the ap ear nce of the
burgla y.
In case wher they di tes ify, the crime laboratory examiner and
fol owed by ey witnes es )%63( police of icers )%03( and, lastly, de-
persua ive".
and the age and gender of the respondent. We employed stepwise logistic
a binary dep ndent variable such as wehave her: conviction (yes, no)
and nature of the trial verdict decision (easy, difcult). The reader
elbaT
7.4
lairT :emoctuO tcidreV dna ~ase/~if iculty
of
nois ceD
cits goL
nois erg R
) s d og o l (
tned peD
selbair V
s en visau reP
fo
eciloP
recif O
s en visau reP
fo
emirC baL
renimaxE
s en visau reP
fo
tnad ef D
gnid atsrednU
fo
lacisyhP
ecn divE
egA fo
ro uJ
redn G fo
ro uJ
seit l ba orP detciderP
ihC ledoM
erauqS
dna. not seno gnis erd a s en visau rep ht fo trepx eht nor
witnes,
esoht ecn dive gnis erd a type (e. g., sniatsdo lb ro .)smraerif
-nI
capble fo gnid atsrednu ecn div cif tne s tub taht a heavy
nedrub
sedi r with rotucesorp eht ni gni alpxe such .ecn dive In eht
-ni
cif t
.ynomitset
sretn otni eht .noitauqe ehT tcaf tah eht more evisau r p eht
,trepx
\
rotcaf whic ylno secn ulfni eht ease whic t sro uj rieht caer
etami lu
.nois ced
yram uS
dna ecn div elbignat more n aehvti s a u r e p juros ohw tas tnemgduj ni
fo
.sevl smeht
RETPAHC
I V
;NOITC VNOC
EHT ECN ULFNI OF CISNEROF
,ECN DIV
S E P Y TR E H T O FO ECN DIVE AND
LAGEL-ARTXE
SROTCAF
~ntroduct
noi
City, airoeP (IL) dna nevaH weN (CT) rof redn lac eht raey .1891 nI
eht
s e u q i n h c le at i ot ebircsed eht
.selbair v gnoma spih noitaler
ruO sucof si nopu .noitc vnoc saW eht tnad ef d detcivno fo some
noitcn sid si tsom eht eno lacit rc rof ,stnad ef d fo ,esruoc since
a hcaorp 90% etar noitc vnoc ni dnalk O (88%) dna nevaH weN (86%)
dna
a etar noitc vnoc shtruof-e rht ni ogacihC (74%) dna Peoria .)%37(
ylnO
167
in Kansa City )%76( and Litchfield )%6 ( si the rate of conviction
sa
"low sa two-hirds.
The conviction rates vary acros our sites both because fo dif er-
ing court structures and varying philos phies about early case scre ni g
(se Chapter .)1 In Oakland, for example, many def ndants charged
res rving SuperiorCourt for the most serious case and def ndants.
unif ed trial court struc re. Thus, sta em nts can ot be made about
def ndants refl ct those varying court structures and philos phies
fo
case scre ni g.
physical evidence not scientif cal y examined) make? Although the clear
the contribution fo forensic evidence hinges upon the pres nce or ab-
sence fo other forms fo evidence -- witnes es, confes ions - .or extra-
The availability of forensic evidence depends upon its collection --'* =,*"
cis yam ecn dive ylno etaicos a ylevita net a tnad ef d htiw a emirc --
er hw sa eht do lb e h ft o tnad ef d si dnuof ot eb tne si noc" "htiw
a
tuoh iw ecn div denimaxe yl acif tneics era detn serp ni elbaT
3.1.8
cisnerof hw rehgi ecn dive has "detaicos a" eht htiw tnad ef d
eht
-
Results of
Laboratory
Testing Chicago Oakland Kansas City Peoria New Haven
Identification/
Reconstruction 74% 89% 72% 75% 86%
No Evidence
Examined 77% 89% 67% 71% 85%
Failure to
Associate 75 % 87% 46%"'" 73% 75%
--
* Only 29 cases
** Only' 26 cases
City, howev r, a dif er nt pat ern em rg s. The "failure to as ociate"
category has many few r convictions )%64( than any fo the other
def ndants are sometimes the b nefic aries fo laboratory tes tha -
fail
to link them with the crime. Dif er nces betwe n no forensic evid nce
are min al, albeit in the xpected irections (67% versu .)%27 The
def nda t with a crime scen or vict m. The dif er nces, howev r, are
,
' ra ely large and sometimes fail to reach sta istical sign fican e.
T a n g i b l eE v i d e n c e and Conviction
-- can link a def ndant with a crime scen and/or victm. Inde , other
(se Forst, 1977). Conviction rates for case with no tangible evi-
denc , evidence tha "ten atively" as ociates def nda t and crime
scen /victim, and evidence tha "con lusively" as ociates def nda t and
Tangible
Conclusive
Tenta ive
No ~ssociation/
snoita cos a ,hci w ni ,nrut are ret b naht no hcus .ecn dive nI
owt
seti -- Peoria )10 .=p( dna ytiC sa n K )10 .=p( -- eht ecn r f id is
yam hci w scit retcar hc osla pleh hsilbat e eht tliug ro ecn o ni
fo
.si ylan tneuq ehT reda hsiw yam ot tlusnoc eht yevrus
tnemurtsni
elbignat ecn dive dna noitc v detn serp ehtni gnidec rp section,
fo sevl smeht dna ni noita bm c htiw eht cisnerof nehw ecn div we
hcihw degr me
:era
.nopaew
demus rp
4.laicurc
roirp ot eht
.emirc
aelp gnirud
5.snoitaitogen
,si ylan eht ecn ulfni fo rotcaf hcae nopu nac oitc vnoc eb
des a
. s e l b a i r a v t n e d n e p d rn ei h t o r f g n i l o r t n c ,ralucitrap nI ew
nac
eta il caf
.si ylan eht
eW have nesohc ot ezil tu esiwp t nois erg cits gol ,si ylan a
s orca la
.snoitc dsiruj
lA
se aC
71
elbaT
8.3
lA
se aC
roi P
pihsnoitaleR -- -- - 73"" - "93 --
dets r A ~t/Near
emirC en cS
s ensuoireS
droceR roi P
se ntiweyE
detciderP
seit l ba orP
ledoM
ihC
erauqS
stcef evitaler ht f o
detal r ehto dna cisnerof
luf n i d e t a c i d sn a , e m o c t u e s a c g n i a l p x e yb eht e g a t n e c r t sp e d o m
fo
ytiC sa n K dna mrof ep sledom airoeP ,tseb gnitc derp yltcer oc %86
dna
hci w selbair v retne eht ,noitauqe ht ret b evitc derp eht rewop
fo
nevigeht
.ledom
.cits retcar hc
ngis ni tnorf e h ft o
.)stneicif eoc
971
relationship to eb no linear e s( ~ppendix VIII). That is, rates of
def nda t sta em nts becom more incr m ating. sA a result, and to
ac om date sub equ nt tes for interactions, the orig nal four-lev
outright confes ion with those case wher the def nda t
(IEV~); her , case wher the def nda t made no sta em nts
inter sting situations invol ing def nda t sta em nts and made the task
man geabl .
We found tha for the cit es of Oakl nd, Peoria and New Haven,
lVEI
proved o et b sign ficant ta the 1O. .lev That ,si case wher the
Q81
IEV3 osla devorp ot eb a tnacif ngis rotciderp ni e rht
:gnitsartnoc
--
--
gnaT- i b ive-e& cned e -p r o v e - d - t i r b m i m l f i c%5tVd i c t nr io e rht
181
ecn d y l e v i t a n eh tc i w r o setaicos a ylevisulcno the tnad ef d with
egr m sa srotciderp tnacif ngis ni more naht a ,noitc ds ruj elgnis and
ecn divE cisneroF
rotciderp tnacif ngis in ylno eno noitc ds ruj - .airoeP Howevr, eht
- -
--- - -
- forensicva+bl tcaretni-did selbair v htiw ni owt seitrch o ot
281
cisnerof ecn dive dna sti htiw noitcaretni rehto
otde n w selbair v
elbair v saw
.de oc r
ne wteb ecn dive cisnerof dna hci w emoctu esac era yhtrow fo
-xe
bal( troper .sv on )troperbal saw del bal lVEF dna eht ret al
(as-
pihsnoitaler saw tnacif ngis (at eht .05 )level saw ni airoeP
sa naK(
.srotcaf
183
snoitcaretnIcisneroF
ton t o s e i t l b i s o p h c u se l i f o r p ni siht n e v i g y d u rt as l c i t r a p
sti
case
.emoctuo
to influence case outc me. Recal tha the orig nal seriousnes
is, conviction rate di not always consi tently increase (or decr ase)
dif er nt coding schem s: SERl (the orig nal ordinal vari ble); SER2 a (
cubi transformation) which clas if ed the most and least serious crimes
data if there wer owt changes in direction of a curve plot ing crime
more serious, rates of conviction might rise, then fal , only to rise
ag in.
with SER2 (which clas ified progres ively more and les serious case
absence of a laboratory report which combines with the most and least
i
with a firearm and which resulted in great bod ily injury. The least
dna elbair v suo nit oc eht )ega( ta sti 01.naem eW tsrif enimax
eht
y r o t a b h lt i w e s o h t i w d e r a p m o c
.stroper
nehw eht yrota b l troper evita cos n sdleiy dna stlu er %59
nehw
%26 nehw se ac htiw gnitanim rcni snoi s mda era detsar noc
esohtiw
ekam ,tnem a s noitc vnoc setar era detav le yltaerg (in s ecxe
fo
90%) rof all ,seac e h td n a ecn ref id edam yb trope cisnerof eht
si
si ylthgils n a h tr e w o l se ac rof y r o t a b u ol h t i w
.)stroper
nI weN nevaH ew dnif taht lVEF htiw stcaretni SER2 ni sti tcef
no
yletami -
98I nehw stroper era tnes rp dna 91% when yeht are .ton
nI sum, ,neht eht ecnatropmi fo eht forensic sraep lb irav ot
eb
eht crime ro ton (FEVZ). It dluohs eb noted, ,rev woh tah ni ~eoria
wher htob lVEF dna ,tnacif g sera ZVEF FEV2 si eht tna imod fo
eht
.owt
s i y l adneAt g r fo
se n f O cif epS
smrof fo ecn div thgim esn f o pu gnid epyrav .epyt ruO survey
fo
.tcaeht
The noitac l e h tf o s e g r mt es r a
y r o t a n l p x e t n a r o p em hi n a s
with asocited a tsoh fo s entiw dna ecn div smelborp whic era
-s el
Table 8.4
(~og Od s)
A l l Case
tA t Murd/ Theft/
Ar ested at/near
Predicted
Mode 1
Chi Square 10.17"" 10.34"" 23.98'k* 63.73"" 53.53** 45.05""
- - - - .
s'tnad ef d
.tliug
.seireb roF elbignat ecn dive it si eht ecn serp fo emos epyt fo
-sa
ega ,selbair v cihpargomed dna race, tnacif ngis era ni gni alpxe the
detcivnoc fo
.epar
roF ,red um elbair v tnacif ngis rehto eht gnit es )3VEI( ta sti
ladom
tna sekam ylno a gni am d ,tnem a s setar noitc vnoc pid ot 38% nehw a
.tnes rp
For thef s/ rauds, we set other signif cant indep nde t variables
are is ued tub fail t oa s o c i a t e the def nda t with the crime and those
wher they .od Employing thes controls, the conviction rate increas
from %19 to practi al y 10 % with the pres nce of a lab repo t as ociat-
ing the def nda t with the crime. We su pect the reason FEVZ dominates
the pas ing fo bad checks and use fo stolen credit cards, wher ti
si
handwrit ng.
This distinction si lost in burgla ies wher the pres nce of any
forensic repo t )1VEF( si as ociated with signif cantly higher convi -
and wher no witnes es are pres nt, the of ender si not ap reh nde at
The forensic variable also interacts with the def nda t sta em nts
signif cantly lower conviction rates (from %78 to 36%). Because most
tif ca on") and seldom are suc es ful in as ociating the def ndant with
vari ble.
19 2
nI sum, t si the in esn f o categoris fo murde, yralg ub and
Sumary
.snoitc d ruj
emrg as of
predicts mal, b signfcty
.noitc v
.setar
snoi sefnocthgirtuo -- pleh tcivnoc .sevl smeht sihT si osla eurt nehw
rehtar noit .ylmrofinu ,yl aniF stnad ef d lufht oy (20 sraey and
rieht evitc ps r
.seit num oc
The decision to convict si a crucial one for def ndants. But also
of importance are the charges fo which the def ndant si convicted and
NOTES
b o c da nJ n i e t s n e i E )7 91( .
3. ehT read elbaT w iv dluohs 1.8 a dn tneuq sbu elbat elbaT(
8.2)
whic setalub t-s orc suoirav slev f o
noitc v dna ec div elbignat
with rates, ,noituac y e h tr o f od not lortn c for ,yraitned v r hto
extra dna l ge srotcaf ihpargomed n i detc les .se ac Given
ehtaht
tsurht s i h ft o trope si on lacisyhp ew ,ecn div
te ns h r p
etair v b lait n .se ylan Howevr, eht stcef fo
es ht
varibles no noitc v t es bu m der pmet y b noitared snoc fo
rehto
case
.selbair v
)si ylan .
9 1 6
62.1
)tpecretni(
Wher FEVl = -1: p ytil ba orp( fo )noitcivnoc = golitna .396 = 2.488 = .71 9B
(no yrota b i golitna( .396)+1 3.488
)troper
gniko l
seinol f detc l s ni epyt
rof "sdnert" ni eht
dna
snoitub r noc
ruo at d dluohs
fo
ecn div suo ra
eb dew iv sa
.hcus I
CHAPTER
XI
Introduction
In this chapter our focus si upon sentence and the factors tha
control ing for other evidentiary vari bles and extra-l g factors,
Our working hypothesi si tha forensic evid nce (along with a range of
other factors) makes a signif cant dif er nce in the charge reduction
Wher forensic evid nce, especial y as ociat ons, exist , the frequency
since the sta e's case can be presum d not to eb weak. tA sentencing
Kansa City. The figures range Erom 79% of convicted def ndants incar-
of ense also varies acros site . Chicago and Oakland, which ave the
and armed rob eries (ref to Table 4.1). Yet when we compare the rates
fo incarceration for specif c of ense acros sites, theg neral pat ern
has the highest incarceration rate by crime type, especial y for les
serious of ense such as burglary and thef . Sim larly, Kansa City has
at the low end 1( year or les , county jail .)emit This is particularly
true in Oakland, wher ther are very few long sentences ( 5 years +).
Table 9.1
Of ense
Type
Chicago Oakland Kans City Peoria New Haven
tA temp Murder/
.g A Bat ery
80% 65% 41% 67% 83%
Rape
95% 74% 39% 91% 59%
Rob ery
70% 89% 55% 100% 73%
Burg1 ary
80% %58 39% 74% 70%
Theft
50% 8 1% 41% 50% 46%
Chicago, by contras , si dram tical y dif er nt from the other site ,
having few short sent ces 1( year or les) and mostly interm diate and
long sent c .
site should not be drawn from thes dat. When sent ces are broken
down yb type fo of ens , howev r, sim lar pat erns emrg, Oakland
remains the most leni t site acros types of of ens , as Table 9.2
revals. For six d f er nt of ens for which w e have suf ic ent sen-
tenci g dat , Oakl nd def nda ts rec ived the shortes sent ces
fo
incar e ation, on averg. (Recal , thoug , tha more def nda ts are
Inter stingly, thes d a t beli the gen ral presumption tha sent ces
does not fol ow this pat ern, given its high rate of incar e ation
)%37(
obvi us. Of course, charge reductions have sent cing impl cations;
ot-herw?s-e~hy-wou-1-d-c-OUT
ef- d na sfrwo-t uc e s-o rp s lt~c-a -
203
Table 9 . 2
Offense
Type Chicago Oakland Kansas City Peoria New Haven
Attempt Murder/
Agg. Battery 53 mnths 19 mnths 41 mnths 38 mnths 23 mnths
Robbery 44 21 59 38 36
Burglary 44 14 36 25 34
Theft
ant? Skeptics, howev r, including crit cs of the pl a bargain g
prc es , might argue tha charge reductions from the prosecutor are
to convi ce def ndants tha their at orney has obtained a "go d deal"
convict ons no les r, related charges (e.g., armed rob ery to rob ery)
Secondly, sta e crim nal codes typical y encourage charge barg in-
ing, by provid ng for stif sentences for certain of ens . For exam-
fo dwel ings does .ton Thus, ta least for some of ense charge barg in-
ing is likely to mat er simply because the sta e legislature has prov-
2Q5
Table 9.3
All Cases
Most
Serious Charge 71% 81 % 52% 66% 73%
The dif er nces are in the range fo 41-21 perc ntage points ni Oakl nd
and P e o r i a nd ful y 20 perc ntage points in New Haven and Kans City.
This pat ern, which em rg s for the ful sample fo case , also ap e rs
for virtual y al of ens types -- burgla y, rob ery, thef , .cte -- for
such a pat ern ap e rs for rob ery c a s e tub not f o ra n y other of ens .
site , withou exc ption, def nda ts convicted fo a reduc charge are
sentenced to les prison/jail .emit The dif er nces are typical y quite
and Peoria. Only in Oakl nd and New Haven si the dif er nce rather
smal 1 -9( .)shtnom Again, thes pat erns remain consi ten acros
Peoria. In Oakl nd and New Haven the pat ern holds for t hmeo r se-
Table
9.4
Mean L e n g t h of Incarceration
:;)shtnom(
Most
Serious Charge
tencing, we adopt the logic and techniques of path an lysi . For our
def nda t's age would be prio to incrim nating sta em nts, etc.),
tub
such refinem nts are un ec s ary for our more straightforward pur ose
shorter time. Thus, the next question becoms: "what factors influence
whether a def ndant obtains a charge reduction or not?" For, the fac-
1
and the likeliho d of charge reduction.
EVIDENCE
EXTRA-LEGAL
FACTORS 1
Forensic Evidence and Charge Reduction
We would exp ct tha when forensic evid nce si pres nt, and as-
sociates the def nda t with the crime, the like ho d fo a reduc
charge dim n she . Table 9.5 pres nt the simple, bivar te rela-
tionships for each site. We find the expected pat ern in Oakl nd.
Def ndants are much more like y to be convicted on the most serious
Oakland and Peoria, the dif er nces are sta istical y sign ficant
.)10 .=p( Ther are no signif cant dif er nces in Kansa City or New
vil near (wher forensic evid nce testing results ni eith r an as oci -
for situations wher laboratory result are les defin tive or absent
altogether.
sociate the def nda t with the crime. The lat er relationship si to be
exp cted, but the forme si directly contra y to what we would predict.
211
Table 9.5
Results of
Laboratory
Testing Chicago Oakland Kansas City Peoria New Haven
Identification/
Reconstruction 83% 61% 44% 91% 76%
No Evidence
Examined
Failure to
Associate
evid nce con lusively as ociates a def nda t with the crime/sc ne,
%78
with 78% wher ther si no tangible evid nce link g def nda t and
Thus, wher as tangible evidence was a cru ial factor in the like ho d
charge barg in .
the an lyse rev aled surp is ngly few expected findgs. Def nda t
Peoria Oklnd, dna New .nevaH Wher eht sah tnad ef a roi p recod,
and New
.nevaH
same .yaw In sa n K City and saelp ,airoeP more are evicudno ot charge
Table
6.9
(~og Od s)
Al Case
Most Serious
Prio
,Case Dis-
posit on (trial)
Seriousne
fo Incide t
Forensic Evidenc
Eyewitnes -- *17.- -- -- --
Predicted
Model
Chi Square 36.56":" .93 ky*4 64. * >92 " 50.53 7.46 1
*ky
(c) IEV2
(dl I E V 3
reductions, tub ni Chicago bench trials a r em o r e like y to gen rate
to refl ct dif er nces in thepolit cal posture fo the two pr secuto '
ta( the prelim nary hearing) weak case prio to the advent fo prosecu-
Peoria, the least and most serious of ens have the great s like ho d
ing tha ta the low end of t h es r i o u s n e s scale, convict ons t o the top
Oakland and Peoria. In both locations black def ndants are more like y
to be convicted of the top charge. The def nda ts' age makes a dif er-
def nda ts are more likely to obtain reductions in Kans City; older
T h e o n l y s i t ew h r e f o r e n s i c e v i d n c e ex rts ma i n ef ct on
twe n the def nda t and the crime with those tha od (contr l ing for
searched for interactions fo the t w o f rensic evid nce dichot mies (FEV1
)2VEF( interacts with another evid nce vari ble )2VEI( , we find ti si
n o sta em nt, tha a lab repo t as ociating.the def n a t with the crime
from 67% to 97%. So, consi ten with our find gs in the convict/no
convi t an lysi , we find the forensic evid nce xerts its maxi um
varied; the cl arest and most notable trend takes place inOakld.
gorp rs e s-ive-ly-1-0 w e r r a t ~ ~ i ~ t l ~ t ~ t h e t ~ h a
re g as c as e sc e b ome
more serious (FEV~SER~). Case with labor t y repo ts fit this down-
ward trend in the les serious of ens categories tub have higher rates
quadr tic trend :tseb convict ons to the top charge decline as crimes
ext n a labor t y repo t tie ng the def nda t with the crime,
si
the top charge wher def ndants have of er d an alib to authori es.
jurisd ction.
o n l y about %06 in Oakland and Peoria. Gen ral y, thoug , our set of
vari bles does slightly bet r predicting charge reductions than convi -
Our abil ty to explain charge reduction si dim nished when sim lar
top charge in the of ense fo murder, at empt murder and rob ery.
Noneth les , we find def nda t sta em nts and tangible evidence to be
sign ficant factors in thre of ense categories :hcae def ndant sta e-
ments ni at empt murder, burgla y and rob ery, and tangible evidence in
with conviction on the top charge. For rob eries and burglaries we find
sion to be crit cal; her a confes ion si as ociated with higher rates
orig nal charge for at empt murderjag rav ted bat ery. For the property
distinguishes tangible evid nce tha tenta ively as ociates the def nd-
ant with thecrime from tha which conclusively as ociates thed fendant
with the of ense which is crit cal. Her , tangible evidence con lu-
sively as ociating the def nda t with the crime si as ociated with
-
clsa-r g e s-in-ex c f-egnah p -o a - r - 1e h T - . - a e 1 y e a 1 a fact or wh i c h was
signif cant in more than a single crime category was prior relationship
Table
7.9
yb Of ens Type
goL( Ods)
tA t Murd/ Theft/
Convict on on Murde Ag Bat Rape Rob ery Burgla y Fraud
Most Serious
Charge 47% 60% 59% 70% 73% 72%
Ar est d at/near
Race
Predicted
Model
Chi Square 6. * k y 6 8 .41 869r* .1 67":* .71 'gr943 " 56.94 .43
" k ' 9 3
p p
than single of ens category. For burglaries and thef s, older de-
def n a ts.
with convictions ot the top charge. The pres nce fo a laboratory repot
(from 72% to 92%) when control ing for other indep nde t vari bles.
whic distinguishes dam ging sta em nts ut er d by the def ndant with
those wher outrigh confes ions are made, and TEV2, which distinguishes
tangible vidence tha tenta ively and conclusively links the def nda t
to the crime.
two types of def nda t sta em nts tha convictions to the top charge are
signif cantly hig er. In murder, wher few r than half the def ndants
once ag in lead to convictions ta the higher charge, tub this time wher
def ndants are 3 co perative and refuse to make any sta em nts to
--- - -- - -- P---- --
Consequently, we se tha ev n though the ~resencelabsence of a
report) which enga es in the most signif cant interactions with other
for how long a .mret Prior res arch has ind cated, sometimes in a very
detailed way, tha the factors as ociated with thes two steps may vary
are incarcerated; the figure drops to %37 in Chicago, %07 in New Haven,
site, nemow era less ylekil ebot detar c a ni naht men, a gnid f
tah
noituac ni eht gniterp tni ezis of eht lautc .ecn ref id The
roi p
--
ne wt b pihsnoitaler
--
-- -- --
tnad ef d e h t
-
dna
- -.
mitc v
- --.-
si
.- -I _
signifkant-i-n-t-wo-----
SLO^ od s)
Al Case
Case Dis-
Ar est d ~t/Near
Crime Scen -- -- -- - 58"" --
Def nda t - *23. *56.
Sta em nts -- -- (IEVZ) -- (IEv2)
Prio
Predicted
Mode 1
res arche s as wel (se, e.g., Bre ton and Casper, 198 ; Uhlman and
Walker, .)9791 It ,si perhaps, most inter sting to note the absence of
such a trial efct in four of the five site in our study. S o m e cau-
.l ams
F o r e n s i c Evidenc
incar e ation decis on in two site -- Chicago and New Haven. The
powerful explan tory variable in New Haven. In both site thepr senc
sub tan i l y.
tions withou __
labor t y repo ts, ___
as of ens becom les seriou. --
Qh_T -
- - -
225
I
I
(90%+) ev n as of ense becom les seriou . Only for the most minor
term.
Ag regated Of ense
Table 9.9
At t Hurd/ Theft/
Murder Agg Batt Rape Robbery Burglary Fraud
Prior Record
Charge Reduction
Case Disposition
Private Attorney
Prior
Relationship
Defendant
Statements
Defendant's Age
Forensic Evidence
Gender
Predicted
Probabilities
Model
Chi Square
227
of ense cease to eb a signif cant factor ni this of ense by of ense
an lysi . That is, once we contr l for of ense type, the ag rav tion
fo
the inc dent si not fo consequ nce. Ap arently, then, the nature fo the
convicted of rape, rob ery, burgla y and thef. Having a private de-
for def ndants convicted of rape, rob ery and thef. Mode of case
incar e at d.
about 53 points.
Chicago and %97 in Kansa City and New Haven. This si more than 10
yrotan lpxe d saerc rewop rof eht nois ced noitarec a ni-g cnet s
si
.drocer
.ytil bazil ren g lA htap era stneic f eoc nopudesab eht gol
sd o
e c n u l f n i g n i m l e h w r v o e h t, n i a g A fo roi p droce si
.detar snomed
by Table
9.8.
of incar e ation. In Kans City and Peoria, def nda ts who plea
-rab
those def ndants who go to rial) which in turn means they are les
thes are not include ni the diagr m. In the most readily inter-
of ens .
def nda t's prio record and the seriousnes of the of ens . Mode
fo
types, dif er nces emrg. Neither mode of case disposit on nor prio
type. Two new variables em rge, howev r: def ndant sta em nts and
reduction continue their strong influence and a new vari ble, type of
Length fo Incarceration
sta e prison or county jail -- for how long? And how do evidentiary
-- -
- - - - p - p p - - p p --
site , def ndants who are convicted fo reduc charges are like y to
serve shorter terms than those convicted fo the most serious charge. We
regres ion an lysi . The results fo the regres ion are reported in
Table 9.10
of ens (murde , rape, etc.), the longer the sent ces. This influence
-- -- - -- -
egrahc- re-di ctionsle~d~to
shzrter sentences ofincar e ation; ag in,
Table 9.10
(~etas)
Al Case
Seriousnes fo 501""
""'84
Incident (4~~1) (SER~)
Case Dis-
.26
(FEISR)
Ar ested At/Near
Gender -- - "90
(months)
234
a prio ar est or conviction has a particular y strong ef ct ni Peoria,
City andNew Haven. tI si inter sting to note tha the relative impor-
9.6). But shorter terms of incarceration almost nec s arily fol ow from
only thre sites -- Chicago, Oakl nd, an Peoria. Wher as ti was the
Peoria, prio record remains the most importan factor ta the sentence
or, supris ngly, no importance at al (~ansas City, New ~aven) . Why its
Table 9.10 -- whether the def ndant was ar ested at/ne r the crime scen
and forensic evid nce. For both variables, a modest influence upon
I sentence
the scen
length ap ears
fo-Seci S-tKeS
Def ndants ar ested
-incar e ation
aw y from
than
resulting from the lack of crime types in the regres ion 1.ledom We
more likely to eb invol ed in more serious of ense and, ther fore, more
reports the r sults of this tes for each of the site . In ev ry site,
of ense and wher the def nda t was ar est d. For the most serious
of ense -- murder and rape, relatively few def ndants are ar ested ta
or near the scen , typical y only about .%52 But for les serious
of ense such sa burglary and thef , a much higher percentage of def nd-
ants are ap reh nde at or near the crime scen (40% - .)%06 This
Forensic Evidence
of sent ce.
- _ - _- -- -
two- tkds-iruj Lon3 w l i e r FEVl actsif;lgularly (Chicago and
Table 3.11
Robbery
Burglary
down to def nda ts ni case with lab repo ts rise ta a much great r
rate t h a n f o r t h o s ew i t h o u l a b o r t y repots.
evid nc . tA the median serious lev for case in the Peoria sample,
laboratory repo t (FEV~) interactswi h the tangible evid nce vari ble
months to s e n t e n c e lngth.
incar e ation. One pos ible explan tion might be tah labor t y
with the crime ,.g.e( tes ing forbld, examin gweapons and firea ms,
Another relat d explan tion might be tha ti si the most serious and
violent of ens tha aremo like y to gen rate forensic evid nce and
labor t y an lysi , because they are the most seriou (from the
prosecut ' point fo view, ta least, who com nly requ st labor t y
hig est being about p x . 1 3 in Chicago and New Haven) tub nothing -pa
proaching col inear ty. Given this moderate relationship, plus incor-
poration fo of ens clas (violent, pro e ty, vict mles ) into the
evid nce vari ble si not mer ly a "masked of ens vari ble. Whatev r
evid nce and length fo incar e ation, while contr l ing for a range
fo
I other vari bles.
I
i Ag re at d Of ens
I
o f e n s e types w re combined with n jurisd ctions. We f i n d charge reduc-
elbaT
21.9
tA t /druM /tfehT
red uM gA t aB Rape yreb oR yralg uB duarF
naeM htgnL (mnths) 29 38 601 3 7 28 17
SD (280) (67) )01 ( )98( (29) (17)
Prio
droceR
egrahC Reduction
Case
noit s p D
Prio
pihsno taleR
Def
tnem a S
cisneroF Evidenc
raenit de s r A
Scen
Crim
kcalB
* tnacif g S ta .05
240
burgla y and thef. We find, to, tha case disposit on and prio
length in the of ense categories of at empt murde /ag r vated bat ery,
rob ery, burglary and thef . This serv s to rej ct the hypothesi
si simply a sur ogatem asure for of ense type. tI si pos ible tha
being ar ested away from the scen of the crime serves to indicate the
ot longer sent ces. Holding other indep nde t vari bles at their
for other of ense categories. Her , the crit cal find g ap ears to be
evid nc . Such an identif cation (contr l ing for other vari bles) ad s
In rob ery and thef , the FEV2 term also interacts with def nda t
both Peoria and Chicago ap roach the Kans yti figure %03( in Peoria
and 36% in .)ogacihC Thes figures ug est tha thevari bles discu ed
for the two s t a g e s fo sent cing decis on are both sim lar and dif-
of incarceration si the dep nde t vari ble. Stil , ther si suf ic ent
overlap betwe n the two set fo predictor vari bles to s a y tha the
decis onal proces for incar e ation and length of incarceration are
Figure 9.8
EDOM
RELATIONSHP
P R IEOC D
PRIO
CASE
FO
DISPO T N
SERIOUN FO INC DE T I
FORENSIC VD
lev.
The most sign ficant pat ern tha em rges from our an lysi of
vari bles tha influenc thes decis on stage . With resp ct to the
denc link the def n a t with t h e c r i m e or crime scen ? The one prime
v a r i a b l e not fit ng this explan tion si the age factor, wher younger
of evid ntiary vari bles rec de into he background. They are replaced
by variables tha speak to the char cter or ag rav tion of the inc de t.
Was the victim harmed? Was ther any prio relationship betwe n the
)"lage also as ume great r importance. Does the def nda t have a prio
obtained? Was the case dispo ed of via a plea ro trial? What si the
def nda t's prio reco d? or gend r? Among the videntiary vari bles,
only seriousne fo the inc de t (and for length fo sent ce, forensic
about sent ce. Table 31.9 sum arizes thes pat erns.
nI sum, forensic evid nce plays a rathe lim ted role in the deci-
sion to c nvi t -- when compared with the f ects of dep nde t sta e-
ments, tangible evid nce and the age of the defnat. While other
evid ntiary vari bles gen ral y dim nish ni importance ta t h e charge
convict ons on the top charge. tA the point of sent cing, t h e influ-
sentence in particular wher forensic evid nce ex rts a sub tan i l main
ef ct in al jurisd ctions exc pt for one, fre from the interactive
lim ta ions which char cterize its ef cts on al prec ding judic al
decis on .
Table
9.13
Nature fo Evidenc
Forensic Evidenc
Y'r
T a n g i b l e Evidenc
*:'r*
# of Eyewitnes >'r
Ar ested At/Near
Crime Scen
9r ~t
Seriousnes
of Incident
**
Prior Relationship
t Yr'
Charge Reduction A
N
Mode of
Disposit on A
N
Type of
Prior Record
Y'C
Gender
Race
Method of Approach
complete a q u e s t i o n n a i r e . 65% of t h e q u e s t i o n n a i r e s w e r e r e t u r n e d
b e c a u s e more t h a n o n e c h o i c e was s e l e c t e d a t s e v e r a l d e c i s i o n p o i n t s .
I d e s c r i p t i o n s of f o u r c r i m e s : a r a p e , a r o b b e r y , a n a t t e m p t e d murder
iI and a b u r g l a r y . 1 The c a s e s v a r i e d w i t h r e s p e c t t o : 1 ) presence/absence
1
of a n e y e w i t n e s s who c o u l d i d e n t i f y t h e d e f e n d a n t a s t h e i n d i v i d u a l
d e f e n d a n t o r l e f t by t h e d e f e n d a n t a t t h e s c e n e o f the crime
(strong/weak), 3) p r e s e n c e / a b s e n c e of a n o r a l c o n f e s s i o n by t h e
d e f e n d a n t and 4 ) s t r e n g t h o f f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e (5 l e v e l s ) . The
( s t r o n g / w e a k ) and i t s l o c a t i o n ( d i s t a n t f r o m t h e o f f e n s e a n d p o s s i b l y ,
i
247
erugiF 10.1
: e p y Te s a C
--
R a ~ e -
elbignaT
:ecnedivE
cisneroF
:ecnedivE
-tnad efd Dtaicos A
:ylgnortS nem s tne si noc htiw s'tnad ef d do lb epyt
:ylkaeW nem s is elbaif tnedi on( noitamrofni on do lb
gnipuorg
-noitacoL
:tna siD on lewot in mo rhtab
:esolC ni mitc v
----
Robbex
elbignaT
:ecnedivE
n i a h cd l o g - n o r t S fo epyt nrow by mitc v dna htiw
s'mitciv
etadh rib debircsni on kcab dnuof on
tnad ef d
Weak dlog- niahc fo epyt nrow by dnuof mitc v on
tnad ef d
cisneroF
:ecnedivE
- t n a d e f dDe t a i c o s A
:ylgnortS namuh do lb no efink tne si noc htiw
s'mitciv
do lb
epyt
ylkaeW : do lb on efink sa elbaif tnedi namuh do lb on(
no noitamrofni do lb
)gnipuorg
o L
-noi tac
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:tna siD found evic on windosl fo windo desu for
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which no f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e was f o u n d . F i g u r e 10.1 p r e s e n t s
t h e v a r i a t i o n s i n t a n g i b l e and f o r e n s i c evidence.
A s can been s e e n i n F i g u r e 1 0 . 2 , w h i c h p r e s e n t s t h e d e s i g n of t h e
s t u d y , t h e v a r i a t i o n s i n t h e f o u r t y p e s of e v i d e n c e r e s u l t e d i n a t o t a l
of 4 0 d i f f e r e n t s t o r i e s . 2
F i g u r e 10.2
D e s i g n of t h e S t u d y
Eyewitness I d e n t i f i c a t i o n
Yes No
T a n g i b l e Evidence
Strong Weak Strong Weak
Confession
Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No
F o r e n s i c Evidence
Close Location:
A s s o c i a t e d Defendant
Strongly - x x x x x x X X
Weakly x x x x x x x x
Distant Location:
A s s o c i a t e d Defendant
Strongly x x x x x x x x
Weakly x x x x x x x x
Absent x x x x x x x x
prosecutor, t h e s t r e n g t h of t h e t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e , f o r e n s i c evidence
P r o s e c u t o r s w e r e a s k e d t o a s s u m e t h a t c e r t a i n o t h e r f a c t s associated
d e c i s i o n s , were c o n s t a n t a c r o s s a l l t h e c a s e s . S p e c i f i c a l l y , t h e y w e r e
a s k e d t o assume:
o t h e d e f e n d a n t was m a l e ,
o t h e d e f e n d a n t a n d v i c t i m w e r e of t h e same r a c e ,
o t h e d e f e n d a n t a n d v i c t i m w e r e unknown t o e a c h o t h e r p r i o r t o
the offense,
offense,
o t h e d e f e n d a n t had no o t h e r c h a r g e s p e n d i n g a g a i n s t him,
o t h e d e f e n d a n t w a s r e p r e s e n t e d by a p u b l i c d e f e n d e r w i t h no
F o r e a c h crime, p r o s e c u t o r s w e r e i n i t i a l l y a s k e d t o i n d i c a t e t h e
most l i k e l y p a t h of d i s p o s i t i o n f o r t h e c a s e g i v e n t h a t t h e d e f e n d a n t
P r o s e c u t o r s were t h e n a s k e d t o i n d i c a t e t h e most l i k e l y p a t t e r n o f c a s e
d i s p o s i t i o n g i v e n t h a t t h e d e f e n d a n t h a d d e n i e d c o m m i t t i n g t h e crime.
T h u s , e a c h p r o s e c u t o r i n d i c a t e d w h a t h e / s h e b e l i e v e d t o b e t h e most
l i k e l y p a t t e r n of c a s e d i s p o s i t i o n f o r e i g h t c a s e s . C o n f e s s i o n by t h e
i d e n t i f i c a t i o n , t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e a n d f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e v a r y between
subjects.
T h e p a t h o f c a s e d i s p o s i t i o n w a s a s s e s s e d by a s k i n g p r o s e c u t o r s
about :
1) c h a r g i n g - - w h e t h e r a c h a r g e o f r a p e , r o b b e r y , a t t e m p t e d murder
o r b u r g l a r y ( a s a p p r o p r i a t e ) w o u l d b e a p p r o v e d , a l e s s e r c h a r g e would
be a p p r o v e d o r n o c h a r g e w o u l d be a p p r o v e d 3
2 ) t h e p r e l i m i n a r y h e a r i n g - - w h e t h e r t h e c a s e would be bound o v e r
or dismissed
charge, o r a l e s s e r charge
4) trial--if t h e c a s e w e r e r e s o l v e d by t r i a l , w h e t h e r t h e
trial
would b e t o p r i s o n , j a i l o r p r o b a t i o n
6) l e n g t h o f p r i s o n s e n t e n c e - - i f t h e d e f e n d a n t were s e n t e n c e d t o
F i n a l l y , t h e q u e s t i o n n a i r e i n q u i r e d a b o u t t h e number o f y e a r s e a c h
a t t o r n e y ' s o f f i c e , a n d t h e number o f j u r y t r i a l s t a k e n .
Overview
The r e s u l t s w e r e a n a l y s e d w i t h i n t h e f r a m e w o r k o f a r e p e a t e d -
m e a s u r e s a n a l y s i s of c o v a r i a n c e . T h e s t u d y c o n s i s t e d of a 2 ( s t r e n g t h
of t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e i n a s s o c i a t i n g t h e d e f e n d a n t w i t h t h e o f f e n s e :
weak, s t r o n g ) x 2 ( e y e w i t n e s s i d e n t i f i c a t i o n : y e s , n o ) x 5 ( s t r e n g t h o f
, two-level,
s o a s t o vary w i t h i n i t s e l f t h e c e r t a i n t y w i t h which t h e f o r e n s i c
evidence a s s o c i a t e d t h e d e f e n d a n t w i t h t h e c r i m e and t h e l o c a t i o n i n
which t h e f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e was f o u n d . F i v e l e v e l s of t h i s f a c t o r w e r e
c r e a t e d by c r o s s i n g t w o l e v e l s o f e a c h of t h e s e two f a c t o r s a n d
i n c l u d i n g a c a s e v a r i a t i o n i n w h i c h t h e r e was n o f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e .
For t h e v a r i a b l e of f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e , o r t h o g o n a l c o n t r a s t s were
evidence, 2 ) t h e e f f e c t o f l o c a t i o n i n w h i c h f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e was
I
found, 3) t h e i n t e r a c t i o n o f s t r e n g t h o f a s s o c i a t i o n and l o c a t i o n and !
4 ) t h e e f f e c t of h a v i n g a n y , v s . no f o r e n s i c evidence. Following
p r o c e d u r e s recommended by M c C a l l h A p p e l b a u m ( 1 9 7 3 ) , a g r a n d mean a n d
by c o n d u c t i n g t h e b e t w e e n - s u b j e c t s a n a l y s i s of c o v a r i a n c e on t h e s e
scores. Two v a r i a b l e s w e r e u s e d a s c o v a r i a t e s i n t h i s a n a l y s i s :
number of y e a r s i n t h e f e l o n y t r i a l d i v i s i o n o f t h e s t a t e a t t o r n e y ' s
o f f i c e a n d number of j u r y t r i a l s e x p e r i e n c e d . B e c a u s e c e l l f r e q u e n c i e s
t e s t s ( c , f . Appelbaum 6 Cramer, 1 9 7 4 ) .
decisionmaking of p r o s e c u t o r s a r e p r e s e n t e d f o r e a c h of t h e d e p e n d e n t
r e s o l v e d by p l e a o r t r i a l ; i f a t r i a l , w o u l d t h e d e f e n d a n t b e f o u n d
It s h o u l d be n o t e d t h a t d u e t o t h e d e s i g n o f t h e s t u d y , a n a l y s e s
c o u l d h a v e r e v e a l e d main e f f e c t s a n d up t o f i v e - w a y i n t e r a c t i o n s of t h e
various types of e v i d e n c e . We c o n d u c t e d t h e a n a l y s e s s o a s t o l o o k
we d i d d i s c o v e r f o u r , f o u r - w a y interactions. B e c a u s e of t h e s m a l l
i n t e r p r e t a b l e , we a r e i n c l i n e d t o r e g a r d t h e s e a s s p u r i o u s r e s u l t s . We
have t h e r e f o r e n o t p r e s e n t e d t h i s d a t a i n t h i s r e p o r t ,
The C h a r g i n g D e c i s i o n
P r o s e c u t o r s f i r s t i n d i c a t e d w h e t h e r t h e y t h o u g h t t h e f a c t s of t h e
c a s e would s u p p o r t t h e f i l i n g o f c h a r g e s o f r a p e , r o b b e r y , a t t e m p t e d
murder o r b u r g l a r y ( a s a p p r o p r i a t e t o t h e c a s e ) , o r t h e f i l i n g of a
l e s s e r c h a r g e , o r t h e f i l i n g o f n o c h a r g e a t a l l . R e s p o n s e s w e r e coded
as: ( 1 ) n o c h a r g e s a p p r o v e d , ( 2 ) l e s s e r c h a r g e a p p r o v e d and ( 3 ) f u l l
charge approved. P e r c e n t a g e s o f r e s p o n d e n t s c h o o s i n g e a c h of t h e s e
responses f o r e a c h of t h e h y p o t h e t i c a l c a s e s a r e p r e s e n t e d i n Table
burglary--very few r e s p o n d e n t s i n d i c a t e d t h a t a n y t h i n g o t h e r t h a n
,
f i l i n g t h e c a s e a s a r o b b e r y o r b u r g l a r y would o c c u r . With s u c h a n
u n e v e n d i s t r i b u t i o n of r e s p o n s e s , s t a t i s t i c a l a n a l y s e s o f t h e i m p a c t of
I
eyewitness identification, forensic o r tangible evidence or a
i
i o n by t h e d e f e n d a n t w e r e e i t h e r i m p o s s i b l e , o r m e a n i n g l e s s f
t h e s e two crimes.4
T a b l e 10.1
P e r c e n t a g e D i s t r i b u t i o n of C a s e C h a r g i n g D e c i s i o n s
% F u l l Charge % L e s s e r Charge % No C h a r g e
Approved Approved Approved
A t tempted
Murder 70%
Robbery 96% 2% 2%
Burglary 96%
b e t w e e n t h e d e f e n d a n t a n d t h e o f f e n s e c r e a t e d by t h e t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e
a n d a n a l y s i s of t h e f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e (~(1,91)=4.37,p<.039). It
n o i n f l u e n c e on c h a r g i n g d e c i s i o n s when t h e t a n g i b l e evidence s t r o n g l y
a s s o c i a t e s t h e d e f e n d a n t w i t h commission of t h e o f f e n s e ( a j a c k e t found
when t h e t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e m o r e w e a k l y l i n k s t h e d e f e n d a n t w i t h t h e
c r i m e ( t h e j a c k e t i s m e r e l y t h e s i z e t h a t would f i t t h e d e f e n d a n t ) , t h e
s t r e n g t h of t h e f o r e n s i c a s s o c i a t i o n h a s a s t a t i s t i c a l l y s i g n i f i c a n t
a d j u s t e d c e l l means, i t a p p e a r s t h a t when b o t h e v i d e n t i a r y f a c t o r s a r e
lesser offense.
The c h a r g i n g d e c i s i o n i s also i n f l u e n c e d by a t h r e e - w a y
c o n f e s s i o n by t h e d e f e n d a n t ( F ( 1 , 9 1 ) = 5 . 8 2 , p < . 0 1 8 ) . Adjusted c e l l
i n t e r p r e t a t i o n such as: t h e p r e s e n c e / a b s e n c e of a c o n f e s s i o n h a s i t s
w i t h a c e l l m e a n , when b o t h t h e t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e w e a k l y i d e n t i f i e s
t h e d e f e n d a n t and t h e v i c t i m c a n n o t i d e n t i f y t h e r a p i s t . 6 In the
a b s e n c e of t h e s e two o t h e r k i n d s o f e v i d e n c e , t h e l a c k o f a c o n f e s s i o n
A d j u s t e d C e l l Means f o r C h a r g i n g D e c i s i o n :
I n t e r a c t i o n of T a n g i b l e E v i d e n c e , I d e n t i f i c a t i o n ,
and C o n f e s s i o n f o r Rape C a s e
Tangible Evidence
Strong Weak
Eyewitness I d e n t i f i c a t i o n
Yes No Yes No
Confession
Yes
N0
Codes: l = n o c h a r g e a p p r o v e d , 2 = l e s s e r c h a r g e a p p r o v e d , 3 = f u l l
charge approved
c a s e , d i f f e r e n c e s i n c h a r g i n g d e c i s i o n s a p p e a r t o b e i n f l u e n c e d by o n e ,
p r e s e n c e / a b s e n c e of f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e , e y e w i t n e s s i d e n t i f i c a t i o n a n d a
t o t h a t n o t e d i n t h e d i s c u s s i o n of t h e e f f e c t s a s s o c i a t e d w i t h c h a r g i n g
e v i d e n c e d i f f e r s f r o m t h e r a p e c a s e ( t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e h a s been
r e p l a c e d by f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e ) , p r e s e n c e / a b s e n c e of a c o n f e s s i o n
a p p e a r s t o h a v e i t s g r e a t e s t e f f e c t when t h e r e i s n o f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e
c o n f e s s i o n r e d u c e s t h e l i k e l i h o o d of a c h a r g e o f a t t e m p t e d murder.
A d j u s t e d c e l l means a s s o c i a t e d w i t h t h i s i n t e r a c t i o n a r e p r e s e n t e d i n
T a b l e 10.3. 257
T a b l e 10.3
A d j u s t e d C e l l Means f o r C h a r g i n g D e c i s i o n :
I n t e r a c t i o n of A v a i l a b i l i t y of F o r e n s i c E v i d e n c e ,
I d e n t i f i c a t i o n and C o n f e s s i o n f o r A t t e m p t e d Murder
F o r e n s i c Evidence
Yes No
Eyewitness I d e n t i f i c a t i o n
Yes No Yes No
Confession
Yes
No
Codes: 1-no c h a r g e a p p r o v e d , 2 = l e s s e r c h a r g e a p p r o v e d , 3 = f u l l
charge approved
Discussion Two m a j o r c o n c l u s i o n s s e e m t o e m e r g e f r o m t h e s e
a b s e n c e of b o t h f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e a n d some o t h e r t y p e ( s ) of evidence
c a s e a s a r a p e o r a t t e m p t e d murder.
A s would b e e x p e c t e d , t h e p r o s e c u t o r i s most l i k e l y t o be
i n f l u e n c e d by f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e i n m a k i n g d e c i s i o n s a b o u t t h e r a p e
s t r e n g t h of a s s o c i a t i o n b e t w e e n d e f e n d a n t a n d o f f e n s e r e s u l t i n g f r o m
a n a l y s i s of f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e . ) S u c h a n a n a l y s i s would p r o b a b l y n o t
be a v a i l a b l e w i t h i n t h e t i m e t h a t t h e c h a r g i n g d e c i s i o n would have t o
258
be made, b u t i f t h e p r o s e c u t o r i s a w a r e t h a t t h e e x a m i n a t i o n r e v e a l e d
s a m p l e ' s blood g r o u p s , p r o s e c u t o r s i n d i c a t e t h a t i f t h e r e i s a l s o a n
a b s e n c e of t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e w h i c h s t r o n g l y a s s o c i a t e s t h e d e f e n d a n t
a p p e a r s t o have b e e n a n i m p o r t a n t c o n s i d e r a t i o n i n e v a l u a t i n g t h e r a p e
c a s e ( i t was i n v o l v e d i n o n e i n t e r a c t i o n w i t h c o n f e s s i o n and
t h a t t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e i s a k e y c o n s i d e r a t i o n i n d e c i d i n g on a c h a r g e
b a s i c d i f f e r e n c e i n t h e n a t u r e of t h e r e s u l t s o f a n y a n a l y s i s of t h e
f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e a s s o c i a t e d w i t h t h e r a p e a n d a t t e m p t e d murder c a s e s .
A n a l y s i s o f s e m e n c a n a t b e s t i n d i c a t e t h a t i t i s 0.f a b l o o d g r o u p
c o n s i s t e n t w i t h t h a t of t h e d e f e n d a n t . It w i l l not unequivocally
i d e n t i f y t h e defendant a s t h e r a p i s t . B a l l i s t i c s a n a l y s i s , however, a t
b e s t can e s t a b l i s h t h a t t h i s i s t h e gun t h a t f i r e d t h e s h o t i n t o t h e
r a p e c a s e , t h e n e e d f o r t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e b e f o r e c h a r g i n g may have
been g r e a t e r . O r i t may b e a r e f l e c t i o n o f t h e t y p e o f t a n g i b l e
j a c k e t was l e f t a t t h e s c e n e o f t h e crime; i n t h e a t t e m p t e d m u r d e r , a
c a p was l e f t . A j a c k e t may b e p e r c e i v e d a s m o r e p o w e r f u l t a n g i b l e
e v i d e n c e t h a n a c a p , a n d t h e r e f o r e , r e c e i v e more c o n s i d e r a t i o n i n t h e
259-
charging decision.
Preliminarv Hearing
F o r a l l f o u r c a s e s , r e g a r d l e s s o f t h e l e v e l a n d c o m b i n a t i o n of
p o s i t i v e i d e n t i f i c a t i o n , t a n g i b l e a n d f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e and o c c u r r e n c e
of d e f e n d a n t c o n f e s s i o n , s u c h a h i g h p e r c e n t a g e of t h e r e s p o n s e s
c l e a r l y i n T a b l e 10.4.
T a b l e 10.4
P e r c e n t a g e D i s t r i b u t i o n of Mode of C a s e D i s p o s i t i o n
a t Preliminary Hearing
Rape 6%
A t tempted
Murder
Robbery
Burglary
t h i s s t a g e of c a s e p r o c e s s i n g . C e r t a i n l y , t h e l i t e r a t u r e on t h e
c r i m i n a l c o u r t s h a s c o n c l u d e d t h a t many c a s e s f a i l t o s u r v i v e t h e
p r e l i m i n a r y h e a r i n g . It m i g h t b e t h a t t h e t y p e s o f c a s e s w e p r e s e n t
t o p r o s e c u t o r s were n o t a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s a m p l e o f t h e c a s e s n o r m a l l y I
i
r e c e i v e d ( b e i n g more s e r i o u s o f f e n s e s ) a n d t h e r e f o r e would n o t r e f l e c t
t h e normal s c r e e n i n g of c a s e s a t t h i s d i s p o s i t i o n p o i n t .
2 60
However,
i
IL
1983).
Method o f D i s p o s i t i o n : PleaITrial
T h i s v a r i a b l e was c r e a t e d b y d i c h o t o m i z i n g r e s p o n s e s t o t h e
q u e s t i o n o f w h e t h e r t h e c a s e would be p l e d t o t h e o r i g i n a l charge,
t h a t a c a s e would b e p l e d ( r e g a r d l e s s o f t h e c h a r g e ) i t was c o d e d as a
)
1. Cases t h a t w e r e e x p e c t e d t o g o t o t r i a l w e r e c o d e d a s a 2. The
p e r c e n t a g e of each of t h e h y p o t h e t i c a l c a s e s e x p e c t e d t o be r e s o l v e d
by g u i l t y p l e a a n d t r i a l i s p r e s e n t e d i n T a b l e 10.5.
T a b l e 10.5
P e r c e n t a g e D i s t r i b u t i o n o f P l e a / T r i a l Mode o f D i s p o s i t i o n
X Pleas % Trials
Rape 78%
A t tempted
Murder
Robbery
Burglary 64%
d i s p o s i t i o n , i t s h o u l d be n o t e d t h a t the p l e a l t r i a l decision is
162
l a r g e l y c o n t r o l l e d by t h e d e f e n s e . It i s the defendant's choice
may o f f e r c h a r g e o r s e n t e n c e c o n s i d e r a t i o n s i n e x c h a n g e f o r a p l e a ,
d i s p o s e of a c a s e , b u t w h a t t h e y e x p e c t w i l l happen. Both v e r y
s t r o n g a n d v e r y weak c a s e s may b e e x p e c t e d t o g o t o t r i a l : t h e f o r m e r
because t h e defense r e c o g n i z e s t h a t t h e r e i s n o t h i n g t o be l o s t ( t h e
p r o s e c u t o r w i l l o f f e r no b a r g a i n f o r p l e a s i n t h e s e c a s e s ) , the
l a t t e r because the d e f e n s e h o n e s t l y b e l i e v e s t h e r e t o be a h i g h
e x p e c t a t i o n t h a t a c a s e w i l l b e r e s o l v e d t h r o u g h e n t r y of a p l e a i s
g u i l t y p l e a w i l l b e m o t i v a t e d by a n o f f e r f r o m t h e p r o s e c u t o r c a n n o t
be i n f e r r e d from p a t t e r n s i n t h e d a t a .
Rape Case L i k e l i h o o d o f r e s o l v i n g t h e r a p e c a s e by p l e a o r
t r i a l was a f f e c t e d by c o n s i d e r a t i o n s o f s t r e n g t h of t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e ,
t h e l o c a t i o n of t h e f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e a n d a v a i l a b i l i t y o f a c o n f e s s i o n
(F(1,52)=5.06,p<.029).7 T h e a d j u s t e d c e l l means a s s o c i a t e d w i t h
r a t h e r complex p e r c e p t i o n o f t h e l i k e l y m e t h o d of d i s p o s i t i o n of t h i s
c a s e . T h e p a t t e r n o f m e a n s i s n o t c o n s i s t e n t w i t h t h e m o r e common
f i n d i n g o f t h i s s t u d y t h a t i t i s i n t h e a b s e n c e o f two o f more t y p e s
o f e v i d e n c e t h e p r o s e c u t o r i s l e s s l i k e l y t o t a k e some a c t i o n .
I n s t e a d , i t a p p e a r s t h a t p r e s e n c e / a b s e n c e of a c o n f e s s i o n h a s i t s
r o n g l y l i n k s t h e d e f e n d a n t w i t h c o m m i s s i o n of t h e o f f e n s e of r a p e .
would a p p e a r t h a t p r o s e c u t o r s a r e m o r e i n c l i n e d t o t a k e a r a p e c a s e
t o t r i a l whenever s e m e n i s d i s c o v e r e d o n v a g i n a l s w a b s . However, i f
t h e r e i s o n l y weak t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e and t h e d e f e n d a n t h a s c o n f e s s e d t o
t h e o f f e n s e , t h e p r o s e c u t o r a p p e a r s t o e x p e c t a g u i l t y p l e a . Perhaps
h e l s h e c o u l d win t h e c a s e i n c o u r t , s o h e l s h e w i l l n o t i n s i s t on t r i a l
a n d t h e d e f e n s e may c o n s i d e r t h e p r i o r c o n f e s s i o n a n d s t r e n g t h of
f o r e n s i c e v i d e n c e s u f f i c i e n t t o w a r r a n t e n t e r i n g a p l e a of g u i l t y . In
t h e a b s e n c e of a c o n f e s s i o n , h o w e v e r , p r o s e c u t o r s e x p e c t t h e c a s e t o
w h i c h t h e p r o s e c u t i o n h a s o n l y weak t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e a n d semen f o u n d
i n s i d e a v i c t i m a s one w i t h s u f f i c i e n t ambiguity t o j u s t i f y a t r i a l .
T a b l e 10.6
A d j u s t e d C e l l Means f o r P l e a / T r i a l D i s p o s i t i o n :
I n t e r a c t i o n of T a n g i b l e E v i d e n c e , L o c a t i o n of F o r e n s i c
E v i d e n c e a n d C o n f e s s i o n f o r Rape C a s e
Tangible Evidence
Strong Weak
F o r e n s i c Evidence L o c a t i o n
Glose D i s t a n t Close Distant
Confession
Yes
No
Codes: p l e a ~ l , t r i a l = 2
Rob ery Case Likeliho d of resolution yb plea or trial for
(F(l,83)=5.5l,p<.021).
Considerat fo adjusted cel means as ociated forme
with
tha efcsug the pres nce of forensic evidenc sah no
tcapmi
on mode fo d i s p o s i t o nw h e n ther isan ey witnes .)l.>p( Yet
fi I
!
ther is on eywitns, the pres ncelabsenc fo forensic evidnc
sah