Shane Costello
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2001
- Messages
- 1,232
In the past week I've started watching both "CSI" and "CSI Miami". While on on level I've found them to be enjoyable progamming, on another level the shows are making me uneas. Take the episode of "CSI Miami" I saw last night. In this episode David Caruso's character was investigating an SUV wreck that resulted in the death of a young pregnant women. To cut a long story short her lover was strongly suspected of murdering her because she wouldn't give up the baby (his) she was carrying. The embryo had been removed as part of the autopsy, and during the interrogation of the prime suspect Caruso held up a picture of a two year old girl. Trying to bring some psychological pressure to bear, he told the PS that this is what his daughter would have looked like on her second birthday. He claimed this image was generated using the foetal DNA fingerprint.
At first I thought this was just a ruse, but at the end it turned out that this was indeed supposed to be a picture generated from a DNA fingerprint. In reality this isn't possible. Firstly DNA can't tell us anything about the environmental factors affecting the gene expression behind muscle and bone development. We also know very little about the complex interaction between genetic and environmental factors that's behind the development of physical characteristics.
Another thing was the absence of protective gear other than surgical gloves during forensic examinations. Surely disposable overalls and hairnets are obligatory, especially since fragments of hair and clothes fibres can be vital? I mean, we don't want the investigators hairs and fibres getting mixed up in there?
So what does everyone else think? Does "CSI" present a scientifically accurate representation of forensic science? If not, then isn't there something fundamentally wrong with a series centered on the scientific investigation of crime propounding fallacies?
At first I thought this was just a ruse, but at the end it turned out that this was indeed supposed to be a picture generated from a DNA fingerprint. In reality this isn't possible. Firstly DNA can't tell us anything about the environmental factors affecting the gene expression behind muscle and bone development. We also know very little about the complex interaction between genetic and environmental factors that's behind the development of physical characteristics.
Another thing was the absence of protective gear other than surgical gloves during forensic examinations. Surely disposable overalls and hairnets are obligatory, especially since fragments of hair and clothes fibres can be vital? I mean, we don't want the investigators hairs and fibres getting mixed up in there?
So what does everyone else think? Does "CSI" present a scientifically accurate representation of forensic science? If not, then isn't there something fundamentally wrong with a series centered on the scientific investigation of crime propounding fallacies?
