
Defendants and their lawyers often discuss whether to plead guilty based on the DNA evidence.
If a plea decision is being considered, it is important to understand the true strength of the DNA evidence.
POLICE DNA REPORTS – BEFORE YOU CONSIDER A GUILTY PLEA
Police DNA reports are often produced early, sometimes at the same time charges are laid.
These results are preliminary only and must be approached with caution.
In NSW preliminary police DNA reports are recognisable by the declaration which states: “this is not an expert statement or certificate.” In other states, these early DNA results might be marked with preliminary report or interim report.
It is critical to understand that the report may not include all work done to date, and there will be further work done if the matter proceeds to trial.
The results are essentially what is necessary to support charges and may be useful investigatively.
The results in such reports are generally not sufficient to evaluate the strength of the DNA evidence.
These preliminary results cannot be relied upon in court.
Any DNA evidence relied upon at trial must be presented as an expert statement or certificate prepared by a forensic scientist.
At the preliminary results stage, critical analysis and evaluation have not been completed.
Note: A DNA “match” in a police report naming you, does not establish that the DNA is yours. Likewise, the report stating “semen identified” does not mean that you deposited semen, nor does it even mean that sperm cells have been detected.
Of course, you may acknowledge the alleged events and therefore the value of the DNA results is essentially irrelevant.
However, if you dispute the allegations, the DNA case file can be scientifically reviewed at this early stage to evaluate what the testing actually does and does not support.
The DNA casefile is a large set of documents produced by the DNA lab, which is not attached to the Police report, but details all the work conducted by the lab in the matter.
A DNA expert review of the casefile material can address questions such as:
- Is there evidence of sperm cells?
- Could any sperm be attributable to you?
- Could it be attributable to someone else?
- What is the statistical strength of the DNA result?
- Are there unknown DNA contributors?
- Does the evidence support that you touched the surface?
- Does the DNA support the allegation, or could it be explained another way?
Preliminary DNA results in police reports - What they do and don't mean
Early Review of the DNA Case File
A police DNA report does not contain the full forensic picture.
The laboratory case file records the testing, interpretation and scientific decisions behind the result and any result which are not included.
A preliminary independent review of the DNA case file can identify whether the evidence genuinely supports the allegation, or whether important scientific limitations or alternative explanations exist.
Helen Roebuck is a strongly credentialed and highly regarded forensic DNA expert, trusted within both the legal and scientific communities. She is the most prolific and judgment-published independent DNA expert witness in Australia
Having reviewed DNA evidence in thousands of indictable matters over the last 25 years including homicide, sexual assault and drugs importation.
Accepting simple and complex Legal Aid and privately funded briefs across Australia, New Zealand and select international jurisdictions.
Published judgments:
WA v Piccioni [2025] – WA District Court
R v Murphy [2024] – NSW District Court
LGBTIQ Hate Crimes Inquiry [2023] – NSW
R v Granaghan [2022] – N Ireland Crown
R v Perre [2021] – SA Supreme Court
R v Ke [2019] – NSW District Court
R v TAL [2019] – QLD Supreme Court
R v Haouchar [2025] – NSW District Court
R v Ahmad [2024] – NSW District Court
Evans v R [2023] – NSW Supreme Court
R v Tsakirios [2021] – NSW District
R v Kabbout [2020] – NSW District Court
In many matters, a short scientific review of the DNA casefile is enough to determine whether the DNA work conducted by the lab genuinely supports the allegation or whether the DNA results support an alternate explanation of events.
