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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Facts, fears and the future of food: Asheville talks about genetic engineering – Mountain Xpress
Posted: May 18, 2017 at 1:55 pm
Asheville-based director and producerJeremy Seiferts 2013 documentary film GMO, OMG highlighteda major concern about the manipulation of the food supply the belief that genetically modified organisms are dangerous.
In 2015, Mountain Xpress reported how local restaurants were seeing an increased demand for non-GMO foods. Until aGMO labeling bill was signed into law in July 2016, locals likeThe Market Placechef and ownerWilliam Dissenwere vocal, not so much about the dangers of GMOs, but about the importance of transparency when it comes to genetic engineering in our foods.
On Saturday, May 20, GMO Free NC will host the sixth annual March Against Monsanto, an Asheville public protest that organizers say aims to raise awareness of the dangers of genetically modified organisms to our food, to our health, our childrens health and that of all living things on the planet.
Even theNational Academy of Sciences,the agency responsible for releasingthe comprehensive May 2016 reportthat found no evidence that foods derived from genetically engineered (GE) crops were unsafe to eat, noted that it is clear that the proportion of Americans who believe that foods derived from GE crops pose a serious health hazard to consumers has steadily increased, from 27 percent in 1999 to 48 percent in 2013.
This trend pits those who are skeptical of genetic engineering against those who, alongside agencies like the Food and Drug Administration, Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture and National Academy of Sciences, believe that genetic engineering is not only safe but has the potential to be a powerful tool for food production in the future.
Simply speaking, genetic engineering is a process whereby genes can be moved within a species or from one species to another, saysJack Britt, an Asheville-based scientist, consultant and agricultural professor of nearly 40 years at institutions like N.C. State University and the University of Tennessee. All of us have genes or pieces of genes that came from other species. Some have been introduced by viruses and bacteria, and some have been spread by biting insects and the organisms they inject into us when they bite.In the 1960s, scientists discovered how to excise and insert DNA (genes). The methods used by scientists are the same as those used by bacteria and viruses to move genes around among species, except that scientists do this more precisely than bacteria and viruses.
Essentially, the idea is that genetic engineering is simply a more efficient means of doing something that nature has always been doing since the dawn of time improving species through natural selection. We now know that nature has created many GMO crops over millions of years. The same organism that is used by scientists to move genes into corn, soybeans, papaya, canola, alfalfa and other GMO crops has been moving genes across species naturally for a long time. When the sweet potato genome was sequenced a few years ago, it was discovered that it was a true GMO crop and that the same organism has left its footprint in the sweet potato thousands of years ago.
WHAT GMO Free NC hosts the sixth annual March Against Monsanto. The march is kid- and pet-friendly. Participants are encouraged to wear earthy colors and/or creative costumes.
WHERE Downtown, starting and ending atthe Vance Monument
WHENSaturday, May 20 Rally begins at 11 a.m., march begins at noon. Rain or shine.
DETAILS Visit the events Facebook page at avl.mx/3pv for updates, including informationabout a sign-making circle planned for 4 p.m. Thursday, May 18, at The Block Off Biltmore.
Rather than improving species through whats essentially rolling the dice, genetically speaking, genetic engineering is much more targeted. With GMOs, there may be one gene altered. Yourenot changing a host of genes. Its very deliberate and very direct. Its not like taking a Schnauzer and breeding it with a St. Bernard and seeing what were going to get, saysLeah McGrath, corporate supermarket dietitian for Ingles Markets.
The use of GMOs and genetic engineering is also more prevalent than many people realize. Insulin is a GMO, so everyone who is a Type 1 diabetic relies on a product of genetic engineering, says McGrath.
Genetic engineering is used widely in processing and manufacturing of thousands of products that we all use every day, says Britt. Many cosmetic, health and other products are produced in fermentation vats using genetically modified E. coli.The technology that is used to produce GMO crops is used to make hundreds of products such as cold-water detergents, bread preservatives, many over-the-counter products and many pharmaceuticals.
Despite the widespread use of GMO-based products, many of the foods grown today fall outside the realm of what is considered genetically modified. Remember that there are no tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuces, kale, collards andmany other vegetables that are genetically engineered, saysFred Gould, N.C. State professor and chair of the National Academy of Sciences committee on GE crops. So unless your farm is focused on commodity row crops, you probably dont even have access to engineered crops.
The current list of GE foods on the market includes corn, soybeans, cotton, Innate Potatoes, papaya,squash, canola, alfalfa, arctic apples, sugar beets and AquaBounty salmon, according to a report frombestfoodfacts.org.
The number of GMO crops out on the market is limited by the regulatory process theyre subjected to.It can actually take almost 20 years to bring a GMO product to market. There are trials upon trials beforethat can happen, says McGrath. Britt agrees, noting that GMO crops are under much more control by FDA, EPA and USDA than any other farm products.
McGrath says its important for consumers to understand which GMO foods are in circulation so theres no risk of being exploited by unfounded, fear-based marketing. When you have small grocery stores, even here in Asheville, that put out adsshowing a tomato or strawberry with a syringe in it, implying that those products are GM, its important to understand that there arent actually any GMO strawberries or tomatoeson the market, says McGrath.
Despite the fact that every national scientific and medical agency in the world has declared that GMO foods are safe, according to Britt, many people are still concerned and skeptical.
According to a recentvideo released byKurzgesagtvia YouTube, there are several common objections to genetic engineering, including gene flow (the concept that GM crops can mix with traditional crops and introduce unwanted new traits into them), the use of terminator seeds (which are essentially seeds that produce sterile plants, requiring farmers to buy new seeds every year) and the use of chemical pesticides and herbicides, like the weed-killing herbicide glyphosate.
The use of pesticides and herbicides especially causes alarm among vocal critics in Asheville.
Philosophically and ethically, I believe that you are what you eat, and I do my best to source and cook ingredients that are local, sustainable and healthy. For me, the conversation about GE and healthy eating is the use of herbicides and pesticides in our food, says Dissen.
Agricultural communities suffer the greatest and most obvious effects of the ever-increasing amount of poison being sprayed, saysChris Smith, community coordinator at Asheville-basedSow True Seed. Glyphosate is showing up in groundwater. Studies show effects on beneficial insects and pollinators, not least because of the killing off of plants like milkweed, the preferred food of monarch butterflies. More emerging studies are linking health issues to people who get drift from aerial spraying. And that isnt to mention the real threat to the biodiversity of food and other crops in nearby fields, says Smith.
AnneandAaron Grierrun the 70-acreGaining Ground Farm in Leicester and have been selling vegetables in Asheville since 1999. We currently grow 14acres of vegetables on land that we lease from immediate family. We do actively avoid GMO seed in our vegetable production. We actively avoid buying non-GMO seed from companies that also produce and sell GMO seeds. We worry about GMOs unintended impacts on insects and increased usage of herbicide in Roundup Ready-type applications, say the Griers.
Britt seemsless concerned than Dissen, Smith and the Griers about the use of chemicals like glyphosate. The primary advantage of GMO corn and other GMO crops is that they simplify control of weeds and control of insect damage to crops, says Britt. In general, weeds are now typically controlled by a single herbicide (glyphosate) rather than multiple herbicides, and the GMO plants often include a BT toxin that kills insects that feed on plants.
When Britt refers to weeds controlled by glyphosate, he is referring togenetically modified herbicide-resistant crops (think Roundup Ready), which have been engineered to survive exposure to glyphosate, the chemical (found in Roundup spray)known to kill weeds. The BT that Britt references is a gene borrowed from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis, which allows engineered plants to produce a protein that destroys the digestive systems of specified insect pests. So basically, the plant makes its own pesticide, and insects that eat it will die.
Butare BT toxins bredinto crops something to worry about? Unlike many pesticides, the BT toxin is not active in humans. The bacteria that produces the BT toxin is used by organic farmers to control pests in their organic crops. It is a natural product, says Britt.
Britt counters concerns about the overall use of pesticidesby noting that now we spray much less than previously, and pesticide use in the U.S. has declined significantly over the last two decades. According to worldwide statistics, the U.S. now ranks around 43rd in the world in amount of pesticide used per acre of arable farmland. Fertilizer use has also declined, and we rank about 62nd in the world in fertilizer use per acre.
For Gould, some objections to the current use of GE technology may be valid, but not those regarding the health or safety for humans and the environment. The overall data doesnt show that GMOs themselves cause human and environmental safety problems, says Gould. If you are against GMOs for ethical and societal reasons, I think its best to express your opposition in those terms instead of health and environmental terms.
Laura Lengnick, professor of sustainable agriculture at Warren Wilson College and author of the bookResilient Agriculture, says: GE technology may be a useful tool in climate change adaptation, but not as it is used today. In general, GE technology is a great example of the overemphasis on technological solutions to food production challenges that characterizes industrial agricultural.
Britt disagrees.The first GMO on the market was Roundup-resistant corn, and that was really designed so that Monsanto could sell more Roundup. Now, while it definitely makes planting and growing corn simpler for the farmer, the company was primarilyfocused on selling more Roundup. So, ultimately, that was a product that made a lot of money for [Monsanto], farmers liked it, but itwasnt necessarily a great step forward in terms of producing food more efficiently or meeting needs any better, except for maybe reducing the overall use of pesticides, says Britt.
For Anne and Aaron Grier of Gaining Ground Farm, everyday shoppers carry a responsibility when it comes to farmers buying seed from companies like Monsanto.We think that most of the responsibility rests with the consumer making decisions with their dollar. If consumers quit buying products that contained GMO crops, farmers would quit using GMO seeds, say the Griers.
Companies like Monsanto are for-profit corporations with shareholders and board members to satisfy. Thus, consumer and agricultural concerns may be secondary to generating profits. This isnt to imply that these companies are malicious or nefarious, however,but rather a reminder that profits are a top priority for many companies. Which company does not have an intention tomake profit? Britt asks.
Britt says the GMO technologies were using today arent particularly enhancing the state of agriculture, as they have the potential to, but believes there is reason to be optimistic about the future of GE. I think the long-term advantages of genetic engineering or gene editing is for things like drought resistance and salt tolerance, he says. Could you grow plants in salty water? If we could do that, we wouldnt have to worry about irrigation water.
Britt also believes GMOs may soon be a thing of the past. My guess is that GMO will soon be replaced by gene-editing, he says. Its quicker, easier to do and has a precision that is exceptionally high. With gene-editing, a specific gene is excised or cut from the DNA, and its replacement is inserted in the space that was cut out. Often the replaced gene is a slightly different version of the one that was cut out and often leads to improved health or some other benefit to the plant or animal.
With growing concerns around global population growth and impending climate change, there is certainly reason to move forward with research and development of potentially effective GE technologies. I dont think you can draw a line in the sand and just say no to GE, says McGrath. I think we have to realize that we need tohave these tools in our toolbox and dont have the luxury of taking anything off the plate.
Those critical of GE maintain that we need to proceed with caution, however. Could publicly funded altruistic application of certain types of biotech help us in the future? Smith asks. Quite possibly. Will biotech be a golden wand that solves all our problems? Extremely unlikely. We need big system changes, which means human behavior needs to change and that relies on the most complex tool we have at our disposal: our brains.
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Facts, fears and the future of food: Asheville talks about genetic engineering - Mountain Xpress
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Why does it matter if food is grown organically? – Myrtle Beach Sun News
Posted: at 1:55 pm
Myrtle Beach Sun News | Why does it matter if food is grown organically? Myrtle Beach Sun News About two thirds of the processed and packaged food on the supermarket shelves contains genetically engineered products. That may be in the form of oils, sweeteners, soy protein, amino acids, vitamin C and other such ingredients. Genetic engineering ... |
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International genetics symposium launches in Hong Kong – Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)
Posted: at 1:55 pm
The worlds top geneticists will come together for the first-ever Joint Symposium in Clinical Genetics May 19 - 21, 2017. The symposium, which will become an annual event, will be hosted at the Postgraduate Education Centre in the School of Public Health at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Hong Kong.
Organized in partnership by the Department of Molecular and Human Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the Department of Pediatrics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the goals of the symposium are to educate and update clinicians and scientists on the application of clinical genetics to genomic medicine and to highlight cutting-edge technologies and scientific discoveries in clinical genetics and genomics. Through the event, the partner organizations hope to lead in the implementation of genetic medicine in Asia.
The symposium will connect experts and leaders in the field from Baylor with those in Hong Kong and across Asia. In addition to the symposium programming, attendees and organizers will celebrate the establishment of the joint CUHK-BCM Center of Medical Genetics, which aims to promote high-quality training and conduct state-of-the-art research in medical genetics.
We are thrilled to see this symposium come to life, said Dr. Brendan Lee, chair of molecular and human genetics at Baylor. Ever since joining forces with the Chinese University Hong Kong, we have wanted to host a conference that would bring all of these talented minds together to discuss the latest developments and research in the field of molecular and human genetics. There is the potential for incredible work to come out of this three-day symposium.
The symposium will play host to key speakers in the field, including Baylors Dr. Igna Van Den Veyver, Dr. Richard Gibbs, Dr. Art Beaudet, Dr. James Lupski and Lee, who also is the Robert and Janice McNair Endowed Chair and Professor of Molecular and Human Genetics, and Dr. Dennis Lo, Dr. Rossa Chiu, Dr. Tak Yeung Leung and Dr, Richard Choy, all with the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Oral presentations will address relevant topics, including non-invasive prenatal genetic diagnosis, genomic technologies and the future, genetics and neurological diseases, inborn errors of metabolism, genetics and congenital cardiac diseases, genetic screening and counseling of diseases, and genetics and skeletal dysplasia, among others.
For more information about programming, visit the symposiums website.
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International genetics symposium launches in Hong Kong - Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)
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Turns Out Nazis Have Some Pretty Wrong Views About Genetics – New York Magazine
Posted: at 1:55 pm
Photo: Stefano Bianchetti/Getty Images
Most people tend to have a certain idea about their heritage: that they simply are, well, whatever they are. Scottish or German or Nigerian or whatever else. Maybe theres some other stuff mixed in there, sure, but most people have a sense that theyre from one particular place, and thats where their culture and maybe some of their values originates.
Naturally, DNA tells a more complicated story, and a new article in Science by Ann Gibbons very usefully punctures a bunch of myths, some of them pretty harmful, about human ancestry. The vast majority of us are mutts, it turns out, and oftentimes the genetic heritage we think we have bears little resemblance to whats actually hiding in our chromosomes.
Gibbons starts the article by quoting a German neo-Nazi, doing what neo-Nazis tend to do, expressing alarm about the arrival of Syrian refugees and the prospect of them sullying his precious German genetic heritage.
From there she swiftly moves to the main point of the article:
Using revolutionary new methods to analyze DNA and the isotopes found in bones and teeth, scientists are exposing the tangled roots of peoples around the world, as varied as Germans, ancient Philistines, and Kashmiris. Few of us are actually the direct descendants of the ancient skeletons found in our backyards or historic homelands. Only a handful of groups today, such as Australian Aborigines, have deep bloodlines untainted by mixing with immigrants.
That aforementioned notion of German purity, to take one example, comes from a Nazi mangling of an already somewhat thinly sourced story about a Germanic fighter named Arminius who supposedly led a rebellion against the Romans 2,000 years ago the Nazis portrayed him as a blond-haired member of a supposed master race.
Now, it shouldnt be surprising that Nazis dont have a particularly sophisticated grip on genetics. But this article is still an interesting, comprehensive look at where researchers are in their quest to understand humanitys genetic legacy. And the short, also-unsurprising answer is: Weve moved around a lot and mixed it up a lot.
Gibbonss piece also usefully complicates the notion of genetic superiority, highlighting just how historically contingent this idea is. For example, she writes of two different groups that collided at one point and produced offspring: The unions between the Yamnaya and the descendants of Anatolian farmers catalyzed the creation of the famous Corded Ware culture, known for its distinctive pottery impressed with cordlike patterns According to DNA analysis, those people may have inherited Yamnaya genes that made them taller; they may also have had a then-rare mutation that enabled them to digest lactose in milk, which quickly spread It was a winning combination. The Corded Ware people had many offspring who spread rapidly across Europe. Today, of course, very few people are aware of the Corded Ware culture a group that was very much, for random genetic reasons, in the right place at the right time.
For most of human history, humans havent been great at recording history accurately, so along the way many cultures have developed myths about their lineage, about who was where, when. A lot of the time, the straightforward stories people tell to be proud of themselves and their ancestors are oversimplifications, at best. In the worst cases, these myths lead to ideologies like nationalism.
Its important to understand the appeal and functional role of bloodline myths, of course: This group could sully our bloodlines packs a bit more of a visceral punch than I am nervous this new group will cause the neighborhood to change. Because people dont tend to really understand genetics, and because the subject efficiently taps into many peoples most intimate feelings about disgust and purity, such talk can be a useful way to rile people up, almost always for the worse. Which is why its important to understand just how superficial it really is.
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Turns Out Nazis Have Some Pretty Wrong Views About Genetics - New York Magazine
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DNA Breakthrough: Using DNA snapshots to reveal cold case killers – CBS 8 San Diego
Posted: at 1:53 pm
SAN DIEGO (NEWS 8) - In 2007, 39-year-old Jodine Serrin was living alone in her Carlsbad condo when she was raped and strangled. Ten years later a snapshot of what her killer could look like has been released.
Investigator Tony Johnson works cold cases withthe San Diego County District Attorney's office.
"It is very important to resolve these cases because somewhere out there is a family. We have DNA, but the DNA has no hit in the database," he said.
Johnson and Carlsbad police have not given up on solving Serrin's murder, but the case has hit a dead-end.
On the ten year anniversary of Serrin's murder, CBS News 8 reported investigators announced they would use a new tool called DNA Phenotypingto help catch the killer.
Johnson called it "a game changer."
Parabon Nanolabs, based in Virginia, is one of the first of its kind. Researchers have produced several snapshots of suspects based on one nanogram of DNA.
In Costa Mesa, a killer was identified. In North Carolina, a murderer pleaded guilty.
Dr. Ellen Greytak, director of Bioinformatics at Parabon, explained the sophisticated software has only been available for two-and-a-half years.
The software sifts through tens of thousands of genetic variants to simulate a face based on hair, skin, eye color, freckles, ancestry and quantifying faces with levels of confidence.
"The goal is exclusion. Phenotyping treats DNA like it's a blueprint and it contains all of the information of that person and actually uses that DNA to generate leads and narrow a suspect list," said Dr. Greytak.
The snapshot creates what the suspect would look like at age 25 and average weight.
Critics, however, argue this could encourage profiling.
"This is not for identification. The goal is not to produce a composite that look like only one person in the world," said Dr. Greytak.
Investigators said that since the snapshot was released in February, they have received confidential leads in Serrin's case - giving her family hope.
"I can walk now to her grave and say, 'Jodine, I'm still trying'" said Jodine's father.
In Jodine Serrin's case, investigators said the DNA Phenotyping cost them $7,000.
While the technology may not be admissible in court, District Attorney investigators said just like a tip they receive, it can be a lead or a guide for them in a case.
There is a $52,000 reward in the Jodine Serrincold casemurder. If you know anything or anyone who may resemble this man, call Carlsbad Police.
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DNA Breakthrough: Using DNA snapshots to reveal cold case killers - CBS 8 San Diego
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Catholic Priest’s DNA Does Not Match Profile From Cold-Case Murder of Nun – KTLA
Posted: at 1:53 pm
KTLA | Catholic Priest's DNA Does Not Match Profile From Cold-Case Murder of Nun KTLA The negative results from the Maskell DNA profile comparison mean that [the] best hope for solving the case now lies with people who are still alive and willing to come forward with conclusive information about the murder, police said Wednesday in a ... DNA of exhumed priest does not match evidence from murder scene Police: Exhumed priest's DNA does not match evidence from crime ... Police: DNA exhumed from former priest does not match DNA from Sister Cesnik |
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Catholic Priest's DNA Does Not Match Profile From Cold-Case Murder of Nun - KTLA
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Readers ponder the randomness of DNA errors | Science News – Science News
Posted: at 1:53 pm
At random
As cells divide and grow, mutations may crop up in cancer-associated genes. A recent study found that more cancer mutations are caused by these random mistakes than other factors, such as environment or inheritance, Tina Hesman Saey reported in DNA errors play big role in cancer (SN: 4/15/17, p. 6).
John Day wondered if replication errors are truly random, not just unpredictable. And he questioned whether all cancers not known to be caused by inherited genes or the environment must be caused by replication errors. Isnt it plausible that many or most of the cancers attributed to replication errors in this study involve genetic or environmental factors that are too ubiquitous to be identified as such? Day asked.
Random in this case means that the mutations can happen anywhere in the genome. There are no particular hot spots for mutation, and these errors are not being directed by other factors. It is unpredictable in that sense, and the type of damage done to the DNA is also random, Saey says. DNA damage caused by replication errors includes copying mistakes, insertions or deletions of DNA, and chemical changes that alter the DNAs message. The key here is that something happens to the DNA in the cell, and that damage is replicated and passed on to subsequent cells. There are still many mysteries surrounding cancer, and this study is the researchers attempt to quantify the sources, Saey says.
In the past, the causes of mutations that couldnt be attributed to environment or heredity were indeed unknown, study coauthor Cristian Tomasetti says. Those unknown causes were generally assumed to be related to hereditary and environmental factors yet to be discovered. One of the key points of our paper is that a large portion of them are no longer unknown; we have an explanation, he says. Random mistakes account for approximately three mutations each time a cell divides, the researchers found.
The moon may have formed when a young Earth was whacked by a protoplanet named Theia. Or it could have formed from a string of impacts that created miniature moons that eventually merged. Both ideas are getting new scrutiny, Thomas Sumner reported in How Earth got its moon (SN: 4/15/17, p. 18).
NASAs Cassini spacecraft captured the closest images ever taken of Pan, a small moon that orbits Saturn among the planets rings. The moon bears a striking resemblance to ravioli thanks to its distinct ridges and smooth, round shape, Helen Thompson reported in Saturns moon Pan looks like ravioli (SN: 4/15/17, p. 10). Readers on Facebook weighed in on Pans odd appearance.
A turtle's shell Adrian Maestas
Buster Keaton's hat Roelof Mercury
Its core is a blend of molten cheese and spinach Michael Neeland
If the moon was the result of a long series of impacts from objects each about a hundredth to a tenth of Earths mass, over tens of millions of years, then why do Mars and Venus not have similar moons? asked Tim Cliffe. How could Earth have been subject to such a bombardment while the other terrestrial planets were somehow immune?
Earths neighbors were not immune to impacts. But each planets unique history may have shaped moons differently or prevented them from forming altogether, Sumner says.
Venus may have had a moon at one point, but it was probably lost as the moons orbit around the planet accelerated. Or perhaps the moon merged with another space rock that escaped Venus orbit, says planetary scientist Raluca Rufu of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel.
Unlike Venus, Mars has two moons. But Phobos and Deimos, among the smallest moons in the solar system, look more like misshapen asteroids than Earths moon, Sumner says. A large impact that may have contributed to the planets low-lying northern hemisphere could have formed the moons, Rufu points out. And in the southern hemisphere, a steady stream of impacts transformed the landscape.
On May 3, 2017, Science retracted the study described in Tiny plastics cause big problems for perch, lab study finds (SN: 6/25/16, p. 14). Based on findings from an independent review board in Sweden, Science pulled the study because: The experiments lacked ethical approval, the original data could not be provided and questions emerged about experimental methods.
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Readers ponder the randomness of DNA errors | Science News - Science News
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Appeal denied: Kayle Bates’ call for DNA testing quashed by SCOFLA – WJHG-TV
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PANAMA CITY, Fla. (WJHG/WECP) - In a unanimous ruling, the state's highest court has shot down more DNA testing in a Panama City murder case from 1982.
Kayle Bates, 59, is on death row after being convicted of kidnapping, murder, rape and robbery. Bates kidnapped Janet White, 24, from her State Farm Insurance office in Panama City on June 14, 1982. He killed her by stabbing her after he attempted to rape her. Her body was found that same day in woods near her office. After he killed her, Bates, who was 25 at the time, took a diamond ring from White, which he had on him when police arrested him.
Bates' latest appeal focused on ten items he claimed would prove he wasn't White's killer. But, in an opinion released Thursday, the Supreme Court of Florida said in the case of seven of the items, "we rejected Bates argument that DNA testing on these items would produce a reasonable probability of his exoneration in light of the accumulation of evidence establishing his identity as the perpetrator. "
The ruling continues: "Further, we affirm the circuit courts denial of DNA testing on the three remaining items not subject to the procedural bar. Regarding the first two items, Bates alleges that debris from the victims clothing, which includes a Caucasian hair sample that Bates alleges could not be his because he is African American, and the victims fingernail clippings could contain DNA of the actual killer and therefore exonerate him. Bates further argues that if DNA testing on these items excludes his DNA, he would also be exonerated. Like the seven items for which DNA testing has already been denied, favorable testing from these additional items would not establish that Bates is not the perpetrator, as the evidence of Bates guilt is overwhelming....In light of the overwhelming evidence of Bates guilt, there is no reasonable probability that the results of DNA testing on these three additional items would have resulted in his acquittal or reduced his sentence."
Bates is also appealing his death sentence. At his original trial in 1983, a jury recommend 11-1 that Bates be sentenced to death. Bates has been sentenced to die two other times, once in 1985 and again in 1995. His latest appeal focuses on a ruling last year from the Supreme Court of the United States stating all death recommendations have to be unanimous from juries and that juries, not judges, are who have the ultimate say in death penalty cases.
So far, the Supreme Court of Florida hasn't ruled on Bates' appeal of his death sentence. SCOFLA is awaiting word from the United States Supreme Court on if its ruling last year on unanimous jury recommendations regarding death sentences applies to cases before 2002.
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Appeal denied: Kayle Bates' call for DNA testing quashed by SCOFLA - WJHG-TV
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Privacy concerns as China expands DNA database – BBC News
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BBC News | Privacy concerns as China expands DNA database BBC News China is building a vast DNA database with no appropriate privacy protection, human rights activists warn. While a genetic database of convicted or suspected criminals exists in many countries, China is thought to include anyone, regardless of valid ... China moves to expand DNA testing in Muslim region - ABC News China Subjects Muslims to Mass DNA Collection, 'Moving Orwellian System to Genetic Level' China Is Creating a DNA Database Straight Out of Science Fiction |
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Privacy concerns as China expands DNA database - BBC News
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Expert: DNA links Norman Pryor to rape – Canton Repository
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Prosecutors used DNA evidence to link Norman L. Pryor to the rape of a woman in Canton last August.
CANTON One in a trillion.
Those are the statistical odds of finding another person with the DNA that links Norman L. Pryor to the rape of a woman in Canton last August, according to a forensic analyst.
Sam Troyer, of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, testified Thursday for the prosecution during Pryor's trial in Stark County Common Pleas Court on three rape charges and single counts of felonious assault and kidnapping.
Troyer was expected to be the last witness called by the Stark County Prosecutor's Office before resting its case. It was unclear whether the defense would call any witnesses before sending the case to a jury of 10 women and four men, including two alternates.
The DNA testimony culminated more than two days of prosecution witnesses.
Earlier this week, the woman testified that on Aug. 1 she had parked her vehicle and was walking to work at Aultman Hospital about 5:30 a.m. when a man wearing a ski mask, dark clothes and hoodie tackled her to the ground. (The Canton Repository does not generally name the victims of sexual assault.)
She said the man sexually assaulted her in the parking lot area before forcing her to get into her vehicle and drive away. Answering questions from Fred Scott, an assistant Stark County prosecutor, she said the man ordered her to park in the Arlington Avenue NW area, where he raped her two times while also hitting her in the jaw area repeatedly and choking her about five times. The woman told jurors the assailant threatened to slit her throat with a box-cutter and told her he would kill her family if she reported the crimes to authorities.
During Tuesday's testimony, she said she couldn't identify the man's face because of the ski mask but said his voice matches that of Pryor, who had started the trial representing himself before abruptlyasking standby attorney Derek Lowry to take over.
After being raped in the backseat of her vehicle, she testified, the perpetrator used a reusable bag to wipe his semen from her body. He discarded the bag outside the vehicle in the Arlington and Third Street NW area, the woman said.
After reporting the rape, the woman described to police the route she said she had driven with the assailant. Investigators then found the shopping bag and had it tested by the Ohio BCI.
Troyer said that DNA consistent with Pryor's was found from a stain on the bag. The analyst said he wouldn't expect to find the same DNA profile in more than one in one trillion random people. Under prosecution questioning, Troyer said there are less than one trillion people on the planet.
Pryor's DNA profile also was found in a sample taken from the woman's body, said Troyer, citing the same one in a trillion statistical odds for the results.
Lowry questioned the basis and formula for the statistical analysis.
Scott asked Troyer a rebuttal question: "Are you confident with your statistical analysis in this case?"
"Yes, I am," Troyer replied.
Reach Ed at 330-580-8315and ed.balint@cantonrep.com
On Twitter: @ebalintREP
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Expert: DNA links Norman Pryor to rape - Canton Repository
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