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For nearly 100 years, fingerprints have been considered solid forensic evidence to identify defendants, but that may be changing as some judges and legal scholars question their reliability and methodology. Though a San Francisco Superior Court conducted a six-month hearing last spring into the validity of fingerprint identification and came away with a new opinion, San Francisco Assistant District Attorney Elliot Beckelman argues that "fingerprints are a very stable forensic piece of human identification."
January 15, 2003 at 12:00 AM
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The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
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