Tuesday, July 5, 2016

The URL has changed!

The URL for Forensic Science, Statistics, and the Law has changed, from http://for-sci-law-now.blogspot.com/ to http://for-sci-law.blogspot.com/ .

Take me to the FSSL blog. ☆

In case you are not familiar with the blog, here is a list of the postings from July 28, 2014, to July 10, 2016:
  • If the Glass Fits, Declare It: The Justice Department's ULTR for Glass that "Physically Fits Together"
  • Conference to Explode DNA Forensic Analysis Through Alchemy
  • State Supreme Court Approves of Variable-Prior-Odds Presentation of the Bayesian Probability of Paternity
  • District of Columbia Court of Appeals Delivers Coup de GrĂ¢ce to "Unqualified" Pattern-matching Testimony
  • Traditional forensic pattern-matching testimony in Williams v. United States
  • Proposed Uniform Language for Forensic Serology
  • More NCFS Draft Documents Released for Public Comment
  • Proposed Uniform Language for Forensic Toxicology
  • The Department of Justice's "Proposed Uniform Language for Testimony and Reports"
  • SWGFAST on "a decision to reach a conclusion" of individualization for latent fingerprints
  • BIT Global Group's Next Flaky Forensics Conference
  • False Justice and Prosecutors' Fallacies
  • The Department of Justice's Plan for a Forensic Science Discipline Review
  • Sample Evidence: What’s Wrong with ASTM E2548-11 Standard Guide for Sampling Seized Drugs?
  • NIST Distances Itself from the First OSAC-approved Forensic Science Standard
  • Hot Paint: Another ASTM Standard (E2937-13) that Needs More Work
  • What Is a "Conservative" Method in Forensic Statistics?
  • "Reasonable Scientific Certainty," the NCFS, the Law of the Courtroom," and that Pesky Passive Voice
  • Is "Reasonable Scientific Certainty" Unreasonable?
  • "Stress Tests" by the Department of Justice and the FBI's "Approved Scientific Standards for Testimony and Reports"
  • Is OSAC Painting Itself Out of the Picture? Time to Comment on ASTM E1640-14
  • Approximating Individualization: The ASTM's Standard Terminology for Digital Evidence
  • Broken Glass: What Do the Data Show?
  • Broken Glass, Mangled Statistics
  • The First OSAC-approved Standard for Forensic Science
  • Beyond the Higgs Boson: The “Prosecutor’s Fallacy” Does Not Explain Why Experimenters Are Cautious About Announcing New Discoveries
  • “Statistical Lawyer’s Tricks” with DNA Mixtures in the Trial of Tommy Whack
  • Alaska Court of Appeals Deems Polygraph Evidence Admissible (or Not?)
  • Massachusetts Supreme Court Demands a Witness from the Same DNA Laboratory -- But Not Because of the Confrontation Clause
  • Higher math in a Kansas case
  • Flaky Academic Conferences
  • Flaky Academic Journals
  • "Remarkably Accurate": The Miami-Dade Police Study of Latent Fingerprint Identification (Pt. 3)
  • More on Task Relevance in Forensic Tests
  • Blinding Forensic Analysts to Task-irrelevant Information: A National Commission (NCFS) Speaks Out
  • Hair Evidence in the “Clearly Not Exonerated” Exoneration of Mark Reid
  • Cell Phones, Brain Cancer, and Scientific Outliers Are Not the Best Reasons to Abandon Frye v. United States
  • Public Comment Period for Seven National Commission on Forensic Science Work Products To Close on 12/22
  • Latent Fingerprint Identification in Flux?
  • Marching Toward Improved Latent Fingerprint Testimony at the Army's Defense Forensic Science Center
  • Can Forensic Pattern Matching Be Validated?
  • SWGDAM Guidelines on "Probabilistic Genotyping Systems" (Part 2)
  • SWGDAM Guidelines on "Probabilistic Genotyping Systems" (Part 1)
  • Disentangling Two Issues in the Hair Evidence Debacle
  • First NIST OSAC Forensic Science Standards Up for Public Comment
  • What proves that "the expert and his methods couldn’t possibly be reliable"?
  • What the FBI Hair Examiner Said About Race in State v. Manning
  • Validity, Overclaiming, and Error: More on Willie Manning's Exoneration
  • Justice Breyer in Glossip v. Gross on "flawed testimony from an FBI hair examiner"
  • In His Own Words: Justice Scalia's Poetry Slam
  • Two Scientific Issues in Glossip v. Gross
  • DNA Evidence Causes Wrongful Convictions 15% of the Time!?
  • Peering into Peer Review
  • Frontline's Expose of DNA Testing: Yes and No
  • 48 Hours for DNA
  • Maryland v. King and Fourth Amendment Doctrine
  • Spitting in Syracuse: Another Disgusting DNA Case
  • No Relief for Jeffrey MacDonald After FBI Declares It “Exceeded the Limits of Science” with Hair Analysis
  • The Junk DNA Wars
  • The (Lack of) Meaning of the Supreme Court's Disposition of Raynor v. State
  • Genetic Determinism and Essentialism on the Electronic Frontier
  • Buza Reloaded: California Supreme Court Grants Review
  • "Remarkably Accurate": The Miami-Dade Police Study of Latent Fingerprint Identification (Pt. 2)
  • "Remarkably Accurate": The Miami-Dade Police Study of Latent Fingerprint Identification (Pt. 1)
  • Justice Department Reverses Decision on the Mandate of the National Commission on Forensic Science
  • "A Bump in the Road" for the National Commission on Forensic Science
  • A Probability for Dog DNA
  • Buza Reloaded: California Balancing
  • Buza Reloaded: Fourth Amendment Balancing
  • Buza Reloaded: The Fourth Amendment Framework
  • Buza Reloaded: Court Shifts Ground But Again Invalidates California’s DNA-on-arrest Law
  • Another Disgusting DNA Case: Please Flush!
  • The Supreme Sound of Silence: Same-Sex Marriage and DNA Databases
  • Bayes in Our Times
  • Hazard Ratios and Heart Failure
  • The FBI's Worst Hair Days
  • A Long Shot Pays Off in Long Island
  • Looking Backwards: How Safe Are Fingerprint Identifications?

9 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great tips, many thanks for sharing. I have printed and will stick on the wall! I like this blog. Forensic Science

    ReplyDelete
  3. INSTEAD OF GETTING A LOAN,,  I GOT SOMETHING NEW
    Get $5,500 USD every day, for six months!

    See how it works
    Do you know you can hack into any ATM machine with a hacked ATM card??
    Make up you mind before applying, straight deal...

    Order for a blank ATM card now and get millions within a week!: contact us
    via email address::{Automatictellers@gmail.com}

    We have specially programmed ATM cards that  can be use to hack ATM
    machines, the ATM cards can be used to withdraw at the ATM or swipe, at
    stores and POS. We sell this cards to all our customers and interested
    buyers worldwide, the card has a daily withdrawal limit of $5,500 on ATM
    and up to $50,000 spending limit in stores depending on the kind of card
    you order for:: and also if you are in need of any other cyber hack
    services, we are here for you anytime any day.

    Here is our price lists for the ATM CARDS:

    Cards that withdraw $5,500 per day costs $200 USD
    Cards that withdraw $10,000 per day costs $850 USD
    Cards that withdraw $35,000 per day costs $2,200 USD
    Cards that withdraw $50,000 per day costs $5,500 USD
    Cards that withdraw $100,000 per day costs $8,500 USD

    make up your mind before applying, straight deal!!!

    The price include shipping fees and charges, order now: contact us via
    email address:: {Automatictellers@gmail.com}

    Visit our Website for more Info: automatictellers.webs.com
    ®

    ReplyDelete
  4. They may have questions about lawyers, or even have doubts about their decision. Want to know more about personal injury attorneys? Find more information on this website.

    ReplyDelete
  5. If you look at the crime statistics in the Sydney CBD, you will find that the number of violent crimes have increased over the past few months. If you are curious to know more about best criminal solicitor, head over to the website.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  7. If you choose a lawyer that has a reputation in the field, they will also likely have a good reputation within the local court.No matter where you go to find California foreclosure attorneys, make sure you select a reputable one. You are curious to know more about foreclosure attorney, find out here.

    ReplyDelete