Published: May 25, 2022, 11:42 a.m.
M. Chris Fabricant, Director of Strategic Litigation for the Innocence Project & expert on forensic science and the US criminal justice system, chats with Trey Elling about JUNK SCIENCE AND THE AMERICAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM. Topics include:
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\n - The birth of junk science as a jury-swaying courtroom tool (2:22)
\n - 'Peer reviewed' as a misunderstood term regarding science (10:33)
\n - An early 1990s US Supreme Court case favoring Dow Pharmaceuticals helping with the awakening on junk science (19:55)
\n - The challenge of swaying those whose careers have been built on a belief in junk science (26:14)
\n - The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) uncovering major flaws with the most popular forensic sciences in 2006 (29:38)
\n - Debunking the uniqueness and certainty of fingerprints (35:56)
\n - How it went when the NAS revealed its findings at the annual American Academy of Forensic Science meeting in 2009 (42:59)
\n - Michael West as an especially belligerent example of dental junk science (47:32)
\n - Unindicted co-ejaculator theories (52:28)
\n - The importance of Steven Mark Chaney's story (55:00)
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