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University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
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Last Updated: 4 September 2008
Pathological Science? Demonstrable Reliability and Expert Forensic Pathology Evidence
Gary Edmond
Faculty of Law
University of New South Wales
This paper will shortly be available for viewing.
Citation
This research paper was undertaken as part of the Inquiry into Forensic Pathology in Ontario, led by The Hon. Stephen T.Goudge, Commissioner.
Abstract
This paper is focused on jurisprudence and
admissibility standards pertaining to expert evidence. Informed by recent
theoretical and
empirical approaches from the history, sociology, and
anthropology of science and medicine, it suggests that judges should impose
an
explicit reliability standard on expert evidence adduced by the state.
The
basic contention is that courts should not admit expert evidence adduced by the
prosecution unless there are good grounds for
believing that the evidence is
reliable. Expressed more precisely, judges should not admit expert evidence
adduced by the prosecution
unless that evidence is demonstrably reliable.
This would require the state to demonstrate, on the balance of probabilities,
that the techniques and theories used by its experts
and the opinions they
present in court are reliable. In practice, the state would be expected to
undertake some kind of empirical
testing to ascertain whether the techniques and
theories relied upon by forensic scientists, pathologists, and technicians are
valid
and reliable. In the absence of testing, judges might consider a range of
supplementary, and usually weaker, indicia of reliability
to determine whether
the evidence is sufficiently reliable for use in a criminal trial.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/UNSWLRS/2008/6.html