Forensic Fallacies and a Famous Judge
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Judge Richard Posner, one of the great quantitative legal minds of our time, relied on flawed and illogical arguments in several recent forensic science appellate decisions. He equated non-equivalent probabilities and offered non sequiturs to support his belief that fingerprint errors are rare. I speculate that his errors spring from cognitive biases that are activated when people are asked to support or prove that which we “know” to be so.
[1] Suzanne O. Kaasa,et al. Do Jurors Give Appropriate Weight to Forensic Identification Evidence? , 2013 .
[2] W. Thompson,et al. Interpretation of statistical evidence in criminal trials , 1987 .
[3] J. Koehler. On Conveying the Probative Value of DNA Evidence: Frequencies, Likelihood Ratios and Error Rates , 1996 .