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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines the relationship between the death penalty and forensic science. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAforsdt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
such as fingerprint identification, forensic science has come to play an incredibly important role in criminal investigations and as such it plays an important role when there is the possibility
that the death penalty may be inflicted in a particular case. The following paper examines how the death penalty has influenced forensic science and how forensic science has influenced the
death penalty through investigations. The Death Penalty and Forensic Science In all honesty the death penalty is not something that is
generally used in our nation. While some states possess the death penalty they rarely use this option. This is not to say that people have not, in the past, been
wrongfully put to death because of invalid evidence that could, in our present day, be brought to light. But, iti s to say that the death penalty itself is perhaps
most often used when there is no doubt of the guilt of the individual, with or without detailed forensic evidence. What makes
the relationship between forensic science and the death penalty very crucial today generally involves truly discovering the guilt or innocence of an individual. And, as it relates to people in
the system already, it involves people who have been in prison for years, some of them on death row. With the many recent discoveries in the field of forensic science
people have essentially been let out of prison, being found not guilty after years of incarceration (Connors et al., 1996). As one author notes, "Our system of criminal justice is
best described as a search for the truth. Increasingly, the forensic use of DNA technology is an important ally in that search" (Connors et al., 1996). As mentioned, forensic
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