Forensic1 DNA2-based familial search methods may mistakenly identify individuals in a database as
siblings3 or parents of an unknown
perpetrator(犯罪者), when in fact they are distant relatives, according to research published August 14 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Rori Rohlfs and colleagues from the University of California at Berkeley and New York University. Familial searching is a new forensic technique to identify a perpetrator if a crime scene DNA sample has no matches in a DNA database. In such a situation, law enforcement can look for a partial match to a known person in the database -- a "
near miss(相近差错)" -- in the hope that the closeness of the
genetic4 profiles indicates that one of that person's relatives is the perpetrator. Familial searches can reliably distinguish first-degree relatives from unrelated individuals, but may misidentify distant relatives as being
immediate5 family, according to this new research. As a result, second cousins, half- siblings and other relatives may be identified as siblings. The results suggest a 3-18% chance that a first cousin of a known
offender6 could be misidentified as a full-sibling using current techniques, and up to a 42% chance that a half-sibling could be misidentified as a full-sibling.
The authors conclude that there exist two unanticipated likely outcomes of familial search policies. The study explains these as, "
Investigations8 may wrongly target the immediate families of known
offenders9, because officers mistakenly believe that their lead is a first-degree relative. Second, investigations may ultimately probe far more deeply than
initially10 imagined, because once officers are convinced that the source cannot be found among first degree relatives, they will widen their net of
investigation7 to include more distant relations. Both of these consequences
exacerbate11(加剧,恶化) the numerous
ethical12 problems presented by familial searching."