Dutch Cold Case Murder Solved After 8000 People Gave Their DNA
sciencewatcher writes "A 1999 cold case rape and murder in The Netherlands has been solved. Dutch police asked 8000+ men living within 5 kilometers of the crime scene to volunteer their DNA so that the murderer could be traced through (close or distant) family members sharing part of this DNA. As it turned out, the man now in custody turned in his own DNA, resulting in a 100% match. The request of the police was discussed here on Slashdot in September. The percentage of people participating was closing in on 90%; in the midsize town of the victim it was 96%."
It is interesting to see the different attitudes toward volunteering information to the government. If NYC asked something like this, it would be an outrage and participation would be roughly 1% if it moved forward at all.
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
"As it turned out, the man now in custody turned in his own DNA, resulting in a 100% match."
If he was really the guy who did it: Was he wondering whether the DNA-research would work? Why not just turn himself in?
I don't like the idea of DNA dragnets.
Just because I'm a male within 5km of a rape does not mean I should be required to give up my DNA.
First, who owns it? Does it get destroyed? Do I trust government to do that competently? No: it will be sold to the highest bidder.
Second, am I coerced into doing this? Will they shame me publicly for not giving up my DNA?
Finally, who else knows about it? Is my health insurance going up because they've found I'm susceptible to lung cancer or AIDS? What if there's a way to tell if I'm gay or prone to alcoholism (hic)?
There's got to be a better way to solve these rapes than asking all of us to give up private information at the threat of arrest.
What kind of idiot who commits a crime like this would give away their DNA for free? Assuming he is guilty, did he do it because he knew if he didn't, suspicion would fall on him?
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
"The percentage of people participating was closing in on 90%" OR "The percentage of men participating was closing in on 90%"? This is why people typically botch circumcision rates, pregnancy rates, etc. Normally the question only applies to around half of the population. Of course, if the police are attempting to use the info to find family members, then "Dutch police asked 8000+ men" should be "Dutch police asked 8000+ people" (after all, something on the X chromosome could be relevant, too.)
I guess the bloke felt he had no choice given the number of other people participating in the DNA test.
Or just wanted to get away from his wife and two kids.
I wonder how big the sample size would need to be to get two 100% matches.
Who ordered that?
that DNA only helps them find the suspect, but doesn't convict them? There really should be other evidence to tie someone to a crime. DNA alone should never be the majority of the evidence.
DNA is never a 100% match, right? Don't they look at certain markers? And that just places someone there, but doesn't explain the why or how.
It seems rather unlikely to me that if you committed a crime you would volunteer into giving your DNA in this sort of style. Was it a full match or just based on a few key metrics, which seems the most common form of testing? It could be family of him, for instance.
"If anyone needs me, I'm in the angry dome."
96% yikes, how trusting. There's no way I'd give my DNA up unless I was allowed oversight of it's destruction after the case was over.
We have to be careful treating technology like this as an infallible oracle.
- Technicians could have made a mistake.
- Our understanding of the science of genetic matching could be flawed in ways that we haven't come to realize yet.
- The guy could have had consensual relations with the girl (creepy though that is) and somebody different murdered her.
It's strange that he volunteered a DNA sample. Hopefully that's just because most criminals are dumb, and not because he's being wrongly accused.
What would be the probability of a false positive if you take 8000 samples?
I doubt a court has already given a verdict. An element of proof like DNA (even if it is a very strong one when properly retrieved) is not enough. A tribunal has to review these elements first to exclude errors.
http://www.transparency.org
The makers guaranteed that the rate of false positives was only one in 8000. :-P
Everybody in the Dutch talks as if the man is convicted already. He's not. The case is not solved until a judge has had the last word, and given the inaccuracies in DNA matching I'm very interested in what a judge has to say about this.
In Sweden we have the PKU-registry. Anyone born after 1975 has a DNA sample taken from them at birth, however it can only be used for your own treatment, identification of remains or research. So far they have kept their part of the promise of not letting it be used for criminal prosecution. Even tho as some would like it to be included in tools available for the police.
I know this is breaking the rules, but I've read TFA. The DNA sample was found on a lighter in the girl's bag next to her body.
So the guy has some explaining to do (why does she have a lighter with your DNA on it?) but it's a long stretch from there to "guilty of murder". They lived in the same small village and probably saw each other every other day; there are lots of ways she could end up with his lighter, some of them even relatively innocent.
Slashdot - News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters, in ISO-8859-1 Has just realised that beta makes this signature redundant
I don't understand why did this guy not move out of the area years ago? I guess it just goes to show that most criminals really are stupid.
In their small town of a little over 8,000 men, it turned out that everyone was related.
I was under the impression that the best DNA testing available still had a match rate of something like a dozen people across the globe having identical DNA, despite not being identical twins.
While a bit far fetched, it's equally far fetched as the guy turning himself in after all this time.
The 100% match is a 100% match on a small number of alleles.
However, the variation in these alleles are not as large as you'd expect: most combination of them produce something that will not be born. Families of people share more of them than you'd think. And outside africa, we're not very diverse (and getting much less so).
If all they have is DNA evidence then they have no case.
This is no different than some RIAA calling someone a thief because the IP address they used was the same as one 8 years ago that "stole" a song.
If I'm reading this correctly, the idea was that a single crime committed by a single man could be solved by the "voluntary cooperation" (let's call it "passive accusation") of thousands of innocent men. But lo and behold, none of the data from the innocent men actually helped to solve the case. It was, in fact, a simple mistake committed by the one actual criminal (offering his own, guilty, DNA) that solved the case!
Yet, if I'm reading this correctly, we're supposed to cheer the outcome as some kind of victory and ready ourselves for the next episode of "voluntary cooperation".
Nope, I'm not buying it. You want my DNA? Come back with a court order.
I'm going to buy this lighter... or maybe.. ehh.. i should really quit smoking.. yes, I'll do it, I'll freaking quit smoking (puts lighter back on the shelf).
I know this is breaking the rules, but I've read TFA. The DNA sample was found on a lighter in the girl's bag next to her body.
Not just on the lighter
From TFA: ...cigarette lighter found in Vaatstra's bag which contains dna traces that match the traces found on the schoolgirl's body. "
"
Actually, the dna found on the lighter was consistant with that found on the girls body.
the point of the lighter seems to be that it was available for sale locally.
If you read the article, you would have seen his DNA was found on the girls body as well as her lighter.
DNA on the lighter can be explained away. But if they find it on her body (unspecified where exactly, so I assume its a significant part) you have a very hard time explaining that.
That's a VERY important point in this case. People hear "DNA" these days and automatically think "irrefutable evidence." But in this case, it's just further evidence--NOT ironclad proof of guilt.
What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
you do realize people "voluntarily" let their children be molested (oh, the irony in context of article) at airports in this country, right?
sadly, I don't think there is a line anymore - we have truly become sheep who will do whatever big brother tells us regardless of cost ($ or rights) or lack of benefit...
I seriously doubt the reaction at fbi, nypd, etc is envy ("oh, if only it weren't for that pesky constitution we could do this!"), more like embarrassment that one of the most liberal countries on earth beat them to it...
Ooops. Still, inaccurate information on /. - who'd've thought?
Slashdot - News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters, in ISO-8859-1 Has just realised that beta makes this signature redundant
I haven't RTFA, but from the summary, this sounds like a textbook example of the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosecutor's_fallacy, which is a special case of the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_rate_fallacy
If you have a suspect in hand, then DNA evidence can be pretty compelling. But when you comb through the population trying to find a suspect using DNA evidence, then you're walking straight into a miscarriage of justice.
"Where have you been on March 3, 1999 from 8 to 11?"
Keep reading, FTFA:
"a Playboy cigarette lighter found in Vaatstra's bag which contains dna traces that match the traces found on the schoolgirl's body."
If government is involved, there is no "volunteering". The threat of physical force is ALWAYS present with government, no matter how far under the carpet they sweep it, or how much smokescreen they blow in front of it.
This seems reasonable, but confusing. If they asked the women as well, then even if he didn't volunteer his, there would have been a good chance of his daughters volunteering. Each would have had a 50% match indicating a parent or a sibling.
There must have been a good chance of the perpetrator not having a living father, and having no brothers.
The dutch government will keep everyone's DNA on record "just in case" they turn out to be terrorists.
Liberty.
In a case in the UK the voluntary public DNA screening threw up a number of partial matches - meaning that a family member was the likely suspect, so through working on the family tree they resulted in the guilty party.
Perhaps it was the same here, a number of the suspects family submitted their DNA so he'd know they would show partials and narrow down the search to his extended family. So better to turn up yourself than to have them kick the door in.
So they found this guys DNA on a lighter in the girls bag... and that lighter was sold at local markets at the time? So it's not even remotely possible this guy stopped at a market, flicked the lighter a couple of times and moved on before this girl, or whomever her killer is bought it?
So they "asked" people to submit their DNA instead of demanding it. Now if you were the actual perpetrator, wouldn't you say "no" instead of submitting your DNA? Yeah it'd make you look guilty but so does a 100% DNA match, lol.
The guy probably gave his DNA knowing full well that they wouldn't expect the suspect to provide it... and therefore the authorities would look at anyone who didn't provide a sample. They fooled him by doing what they said they'd do, eh?
Now the police have detailed information about 8000+ people they know will never ever-ever commit a crime during their lifetime...
How much DNA could be on a lighter? Sequencing a hair seems to make sense but how can you separate the miniscule amount of DNA that several people could of handled?
love is just extroverted narcissism
The crime was not solved by 8000 contributions, it was solved by one contribution. It would still be an interesting exercise to exclude the Suspects match and see if the they remaining sample set would have identified him as the perp.
People react as if DNA analysis is infallible. I seriously doubt that. Given enough volunteers, there is bound to be a false positive eventually. It could very well be this poor sap.
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
to negotiate on the price for our One Lambda monoclonal antibody against HLA-B27.
It was not a clinically interesting antibody for him since he had a high prevalence of cross reactivity with another HLA antigen in his lab and this was well documented by St Catharina Ziekenhuis in Eindhoven.
Translation: The Dutch seem to inbreed in their own kin so much that the most mutating gene in the human genome had such a high frequency that the "monoclonal" antibody par excellence was worth jack sh*t in their labs.
Corollary: They will need to sequence quite some loci on the Dutch genomes to make inferences on the DNA sample being unique.
In another news message it was stated that his DNA matched with sperm and a hair found near the victim. That makes it sound a little different.
I don't know about you, but I tend to hold my lighter with a piece of my body- my hand. Oh and it also gets all over my thigh from being in my pocket. I'm sure if I'm raped and killed my local gas station attendant will be put in prison for a long time.
Police were not hoping that the killer would turn himself in, in fact they were hoping to find the killer by a family member volunteering to a DNA test. In fact, the suspect's father and brother both volunteered, which would have led to his arrest in the end.
... but it has a cost.
According to google a DNA test is about 150€, so for 8000 of them this operation has cost 1'200'000€ (about $1'500'000). :
And I took among the lowest prices availlable
A DNA test for paternity analysis costs somewhere in the region of $200.
If you require the test to be admissible in court, which is often required in cases of child support or disputed paternity, the costs go up. Some say to $500 or $600. (According to one FAQ Farmer: "I've just had a fully legally binding DNA test, following a dispute with my wife with regard to access to my 3 year old daughter. The test cost me nearly $500. I would have paid near half that if I didn't require a legally binding result.")
This additional cost is associated with the need to demonstrate a chain of custody for all of the samples tested.
The victim was found in a field along the road to her home. She had celebrated Queens Day in a disco and was biking home. Sperm was found on her body and she had a cut in her neck. A closer examination revealed that she was strangled with her own bra. DNA found on a cigarette lighter in bag matched DNA found on her body, suggesting that the person who killed her, was someone she knew. Google translate of Dutch fact article.
Anyone who thinks any police force would dump / not test the samples of the 8,999 innocent men are fools. Make no mistake; this won't be the only stone-cold whodunnit that 'miraculously' gets solved in this burg. Every case will be rapidly moved along to airtight frame-up all thanks to CSI: Eyedropper.
What concerns me about the reliance on DNA evidence is the blind faith put in it and the assumption that if my DNA is at a crime scene then I must have been too.
Take the following hypothetical situation:
I ride a train or bus to work and shed a head hair or two on the seat.
After me a woman sits in the same seat and my single hair gets caught up in her wooly sweater.
Later on that day the woman is raped by a stranger in a darkened alley and doesn't get a good look at her assailant
During the police forensic examination, a single hair belonging to me is found on her sweater.
Despite their investigations, the police can't find the rapist
2 years later, I get arrested for some trivial trumped up "offence", such as refusing a police officer's unlawful instructions to stop taking photographs in a public place.
Being a UK citizen, a sample of my DNA is taken when I'm booked in at the police station.
The police match the sample to a two year old rape case.
I'm now suspected of rape, and as I can't remember what I was doing on the day two years previously, I have no alibi and I have no idea how my DNA was found on the woman's clothes.
Am I screwed?
I know this is breaking the rules, but I've read TFA. The DNA sample was found on a lighter in the girl's bag next to her body.
Not just on the lighter
From TFA: ...cigarette lighter found in Vaatstra's bag which contains dna traces that match the traces found on the schoolgirl's body. "
"
It also doesn't say what body part. Perhaps it her hand where the other DNA sample was found, which would make sense. The flint grinders often have small teeth so that they can be easily gripped and used enough times in a row, they will rub skin raw. If she used it after him, its more than like she would have traces of this skin embedded in hers.
There's no such thing as a 100% match. The fact that they discovered a 100% match means that someone is either incompetent or tampered with the results. Maybe someone in the police force committed the rape and is using the DNA dragnet to cover it up. I'd investigate internally first.
Is to not give your DNA out. Sure, one possibility is that this guy decided "well, whatever, they won't catch me", and gave his DNA with the assumption that the test couldn't POSSIBLY work. That's possible.
The article discusses this as if it were fact. What if this is a screw-up? What it was his DNA there for a different reason? I mean, what's the confidence on these tests? Everyone is taught in school that everyone's DNA is unique, but our ability to test doesn't magically do a file-diff, and there's room for error. It doesn't go on for seventeen digits of significance or anything, and with thousands of dice being rolled, who knows?
What about the possibility that this guy gave his DNA knowing that he didn't do it?
I know we shouldn't underestimate the stupidity of criminals, but it seems pretty dumb to give your DNA when the police come around looking to convince you, especially when you could claim non participation for a NUMBER of reasons (or just sell everything over the course of the over a decade this took, and leave for somewhere else). His actions were of a man who believed he was innocent.
How to spot a computer geek. (Types DNS when he means DNA).
"Given that the chance of a false positive is normally between 1 in 100 and 1 in 1000 in DNA tests"
Only if you consider monozygotic twins and use the uncited wiki as a source. Practically the error is on the level of laboratory error and it is much higher than 1 in 1000 for non-twin, about 1 in millions to 1 in billion. Over a small populated area like in that case, 8000, the chance of false positive is very low, enough to be discriminating and make the pool very small, and help the authority get search warrants and gather more evidence.
If my DNA markers differ from that of sperm found in a rape victim then I didn't rape her.
Logic Fail! Actually, the only thing it proves is that the sperm found is not yours. You could still have raped her, but, not ejaculated. Or you could have ejaculated, but, she also already had other ejaculate in her, and there was more of that, and that is what ended up being collected. So, no, it is not PROOF that you are innocence. It is a piece of evidence that, along with other evidence, can be used to increase or decrease the likelihood that you are or are not the guilty party.
Umm, this is a textbook dragnet and could easily result in false positives. The type of testing they do to determine a "match" is not something that will distinguish an individual from everyone else on the planet other than identical twins. It's usually something where the true match will match 99.99% of the time and someone of the same ethnicity and gender will match one in 10,000 times or so. If, for example, the probability of a false positive is one in 10,000, then with 8000 samples, assuming everyone in the sample is innocent, the probability of getting at least one match is still 55%.
Donate your blood, get $100!
Then extract the DNA from the blood samples....
New Economic Perspectives
A 100% DNA match does not prove he killed her, or even raped her.
Wait until the police establishes those facts before calling the case 'solved'.
The show "It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia" covered this subject a while back, sort of.
I find this method seriously scary due to the probability of a false positive. I mean, suppose you have a system that only fails once in a million times and the killer has already left the country. You ask the two million people in the metropolitan area to submit DNA. You get on average two matches. One doesn't have an alibi. You take him to trial and tell the jury that he not only doesn't have an alibi, he had a 1 in a million DNA match. It sounds pretty convincing. It is very possible the jury won't have the understanding of statistics to ask "was this a sweep or did you only test a couple of likely suspects?" Nor is it likely that the information will be volunteered by the court.
The one in a million false positives would apply if you took a million random, independent samples, it does not apply in this case.
First of all, this wasn't a 'DNA profile' they took (this was tried a decade ago and had no result), but a Y-chromosome match, intended to find male relatives of the killer. If matches were to be found, further circumstantial evidence would then be used to narrow the search down, and finally a full DNA profile would be taken to positively identify the killer.
There was circumstantial evidence that the killer was someone the victim knew, and probably lived within cycling distance of the crime scene. They didn't randomly test millions of people, but planned to test 8000 men who were between age 15 and 60 at the time, and lived within a roughly 2 mile radius of this rural village.
Care needs to be taken when using global database searches to match DNA, otherwise even if you have only a slight chance of a false positive the chance finding someone who is a match is quite high, because your population is quite high.
see http://www.ted.com/talks/peter_donnelly_shows_how_stats_fool_juries.html (from 10 min) not specifically about DNA but the same principle. also
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/henryporter/2009/may/25/dna-database-false-positive
Australia has samples of every citizens DNA from birth. Unfortunately it's not currently searchable in some police database.
"sever crimes"... "being hacked..." This sure sounds more like dismemberment with those charged words "sever" and "hacked" (using that other definition of "hack").
i know, i know, the word meant was "severe" with an "e" at the end. It's a joke.
Hell, if they did a DNA dragnet here, I would say no just for teh potential to invite abusive retaliation.
I would record that retaliation on camera.
And then it would be civil suit time.
I would retire from the judgement against the police, municipality, state, lab, and any third party i could sue.
So bring on the dragnets!!!! COME ON I NEED SOME MONEY BITCHES!!!!!!!!
I'm still waiting to see the first frame-up through the use of a little kitchen PCR work. A good science fair project?
It seems like the Italian case of Yara Gambirasio, where a young girl was possibly raped and left to die.
A DNA sample has been found, a mass DNA check was done and the dead father of the DNA sample owner has been identified.
The strange thing is that *none* of the (known) sons of that father corresponds to that DNA sample.
While it is true that government databases identifying the DNA of every citizen would reduce crime and increase convictions, it also means a great many other things. Here are two of them.
1.) Police would get very lazy very quickly. DNA would be used as the "de-facto" proof of guilt, in spite of the fact that DNA is shed by everyone all the time. An ex boyfriend gets accused of rape and since his DNA is there he's automatically guilty. A store gets robbed and the man who hasn't bathed in a week gets charged because his DNA is the "most prevalent" around the register. He probably should have used Dial.
2.) Just because our government is mostly benign now doesn't mean it will always be that way. When social and economic upheaval occurs a great many things can change. Imagine, if you will, a government run by neo Nazis. Suddenly they have DNA proof of, not only the Semitic groups, but all of their offshoot genetic cousins as well. Or perhaps someone develops a gene targeted disease and gets their hands on the government database. for my closing, one word: Gattica.
As to the man accused of rape in the Netherlands, I am curious if he was just trying to play innocent, trying to turn himself in, had forgotten about the rape, didn't think of the incident as rape at all, or if he is innocent and somehow got his DNA involved through some other means than direct collection from the victim. After all, it does seem a bit moronic to give one's DNA if one has committed rape (or any other crime) and hasn't been caught.
My $0.02 will always be worth more than your â0.02, so
I live in the Netherlands and have been (casually) following this case, so here's some background that might be relevant:
Some posters here wondered why this guy agreed to give his DNA. There is some evidence that he is mentally ill: in 2009 he was convicted of stealing a neighbor's car and joyriding while under the influence. He claimed not to be in control of his actions at the time, and that he only came to his senses while in the car. A psychiatrist diagnosed this as a dissociative fugue at the time (he was still convicted). A neighbor of his also recently stated that he has mental problems. So it's quite possible that he doesn't even remember the rape and murder. It's also quite possible that it's simply a lame insanity defense.
I think one of the reasons for this DNA-dragnet was that the area is sparsely populated, and the cities/villages there are tight-knit communities. Many people there are blood-related, so the odds of finding a partial match should be good. It may also be the reason that so many people were willing to participate; they wanted to believe that the perp was an outsider (some still think so). My guess is that some social pressure was involved as well. Anyway, I don't see something like this working in the major cities. Very few people would volunteer, and chances of finding a relative of the perp would be much lower.
Also, there were other DNA tests before, these were done to rule out two suspects - asylumseekers from Iraq and Afghanistan, respectively. They had been fingered in an anonymous letter, possibly with a racist motive. Analysis of the DNA found on the victim pointed to a caucasian anyway (not uncontroversial).
As a group, the Dutch are a darned sight more civilized and far, far less paranoid than we are in the United States. I mean, there is a lot of tin foil sold here for the express purpose of making hats. I do not care who has my DNA sequence on record. It is far more likely to prevent a problem for me than it is to cause one because I am neither criminal nor am I paranoid nor politically stupid. You have no right to expect privacy in a public place, and you leave your DNA behind you everywhere. I am surprised that some of the posters on here do not run around in hazmat suits to protect their privacy given their irrational fears about the government and what it knows about them.
In a perfect world, full of rational, just and sound-minded people, I would agree with you - but then it would be a world without those crimes, anyway... Unfortunately, it's fairly easy to foresee some misuse of that kind of information. People in power have a way to turn these things against people they don't like - be it the Homeland Security agent using his/her job to snoop on and persecute an ex-spouse, or the TSA agent using his/her job to get away with fondling people and stealing small stuff. If "they" have samples from everyone, and you disagree with them or cross their path somehow, who's to say a bomb won't show up with traces of your DNA? Years ago I would read this comment and crack a joke about tinfoil hats, but in these days of FBI grooming homeless people to frame them as terrorists... well, it just doesn't sound funny anymore. :(