Ink dating part II: Interpretation of results in a legal perspective

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Ressource 1Download: Accepted manuscript.pdf (1269.49 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: author
Serval ID
serval:BIB_FB57598414E6
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Ink dating part II: Interpretation of results in a legal perspective
Journal
Science & Justice
Author(s)
Koenig Agnès, Weyermann Céline
ISSN
1355-0306
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2018
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
58
Number
1
Pages
31-46
Language
english
Abstract
The development of an ink dating method requires an important investment of resources in order to step from the monitoring of ink ageing on paper to the determination of the actual age of a questioned ink entry. This article aimed at developing and evaluating the potential of three interpretation models to date ink entries in a legal perspective: (1) the threshold model comparing analytical results to tabulated values in order to determine the maximal possible age of an ink entry, (2) the trend tests that focusing on the “ageing status” of an ink entry, and (3) the likelihood ratio calculation comparing the probabilities to observe the results under at least two alternative hypotheses. This is the first report showing ink dating interpretation results on a ballpoint be ink reference population.
In the first part of this paper three ageing parameters were selected as promising from the population of 25 ink entries aged during 4 to 304 days: the quantity of phenoxyethanol (PE), the difference between the PE quantities contained in a naturally aged sample and an artificially aged sample (RNORM) and the solvent loss ratio (R%). In the current part, each model was tested using the three selected ageing parameters. Results showed that threshold definitions remains a simple model easily applicable in practice, but that the risk of false positive cannot be completely avoided without reducing significantly the feasibility of the ink dating approaches. The trend tests from the literature showed unreliable results and an alternative had to be developed yielding encouraging results. The likelihood ratio calculation introduced a degree of certainty to the ink dating conclusion in comparison to the threshold approach. The proposed remain quite simple to apply in practice, but should be further developed in order to yield reliable results in practice.
Keywords
Questioned document, Ink dating, Interpretation models, Thresholds, Trend tests, Likelihood ratios, Pathology and Forensic Medicine, Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
23/06/2015 14:34
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:26
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