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This 3 page paper considers the value that DNA has had in the criminal justice system. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP693534.doc
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. DNA Fingerprinting and Criminal Justice Research Compiled for
, Inc. by 11/2011 Please
Practically since its discovery DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) has had phenomenal implications for the criminal justice system. With the subsequent discovery of DNA fingerprinting less
than three decades ago, DNA has become a very valuable tool in proving the guilt or innocence of those accused of certain types of crimes. DNA is distinctive to
one particular organism. When an individual commits a rape or another type of crime they often leave evidence behind that, thanks to DNA fingerprinting, can definitively prove they were
the perpetrator. DNA is a molecular component of every organism, plant and animal. It is through DNA that an organism is able
to reproduce itself. DNA is the storehouse of the genetic information which determines practically every aspect of an organism. Aspects such as hair, eye, and skin color, height,
weight, bone structure are only a few examples of the physical characteristics which are controlled by DNA. DNA fingerprinting is hardly new but it is finding more and more
use as our familiarity and expertise with the process improves over time. Discovered just over twenty-five years ago by Alec Jeffreys of Leicester University, DNA fingerprinting has become a
mainstay in a diversity of fields (History Today, 2009). Today DNA fingerprinting is used in everything from criminal investigations, to medicine,
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