TheGridNet
The Denver Grid Denver

CBI let “golden child” scientist mishandle DNA testing for years, report says

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation allowed a longtime DNA scientist to stay on the job for years despite repeated concerns about the quality and reliability of her work. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) allowed longtime DNA scientist, Yvonne "Missy" Woods, to continue her work despite repeated concerns about the quality and reliability of her work. The CBI's inaction allowed Woods to continue working despite a colleague raising concerns in 2014. An intern discovered problems in 2023 and a subsequent investigation revealed that Woods had cut corners in much of her DNA testing and then covered up them by altering, deleting or omitting data in her lab work. So far, the CBI has identified problems in 654 of Woods' cases between 2008 and 2023, and hasn't yet completed a review of her cases between 1994 and 2008. The agency has requested $3 million from state legislators to retest 3,000 DNA samples and $4.4 million from district attorney’s offices across Colorado to address claims by people who were wrongly convicted due to Woods’ work.

CBI let “golden child” scientist mishandle DNA testing for years, report says

发表 : 12 个月前 经过 Shelly Bradbury | The Denver Post, By: Shelly Bradbury | The Denver PostScience

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation allowed a longtime DNA scientist to stay on the job for years despite repeated concerns about the quality and reliability of her work, according to an internal report obtained Wednesday by The Denver Post.

The agency’s inaction allowed Yvonne “Missy” Woods to continue to mishandle DNA testing for nearly a decade after a colleague first raised alarm in 2014, until an intern rediscovered problems in 2023 and a subsequent investigation called nearly all of the scientist’s three decades of work into question.

The CBI has since found that Woods cut corners in much of her DNA testing and then covered up her shortcuts by altering, deleting or omitting data in her lab work. She also omitted relevant facts from criminal justice records and tampered with DNA testing by omitting some results, the bureau found.

The agency has so far identified problems in 654 of Woods’ cases between 2008 and 2023, and hadn’t yet finished a review of her cases between 1994 and 2008.

The CBI this year requested $3 million from state legislators to retest 3,000 DNA samples through a third-party laboratory, and sought another $4.4 million to pay out to district attorney’s offices across Colorado to address claims by people who say they were wrongly convicted because of Woods’ work.

Click here to read the full story from our partners at The Denver Post.

What do you want Denver7 to follow up on? Is there a story, topic or issue you want us to revisit? Let us know with the contact form below.

Read at original source