posted on 2023-04-27, 18:08authored byRebecca Campbell, Steven J. Pierce, Dhruv B. Sharma, Jessica ShawJessica Shaw, Hannah Feeney, Jeffrey Nye, Kristin Schelling, Giannina Fehler-Cabral
A growing number of U.S. cities have large numbers of untested sexual assault kits (SAKs) in police property facilities. Testing older kits and maintaining current case work will be challenging for forensic laboratories, creating a need for more efficient testing methods. Methods: We evaluated selective degradation methods for DNA extraction using actual case work from a sample of previously unsubmitted SAKs in Detroit, Michigan. We randomly assigned 350 kits to either standard or selective degradation testing methods and then compared DNA testing rates and CODIS entry rates between the two groups. Results and conclusions: Continuation-ratio modeling showed no significant differences, indicating that the selective degradation method had no decrement in performance relative to customary methods. Follow-up equivalence tests indicated that CODIS entry rates for the two methods could differ by more than ±5%. Selective degradation methods required less personnel time for testing and scientific review than standard testing.
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Citation
Campbell, R., Pierce, S. J., Sharma, D. B., Shaw, J., Feeney, H., Nye, J., Schelling, K.Fehler-Cabral, G. (2017). Comparing Standard and Selective Degradation DNA Extraction Methods: Results from a Field Experiment with Sexual Assault Kits. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 62(1), 213-222. https://doi.org/10.1111/1556-4029.13251