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Fingerprint error rate on close non‐matches
Authors:Jonathan J Koehler PhD  Shiquan Liu PhD
Institution:1. Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, Chicago, IL, USA;2. Jonathan J. Koehler, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, Chicago, IL, USA.;3. Email: jay.koehler@northwestern.edu.;4. Institute of Evidence Law and Forensic Science, China University of Political Science and Law, Beijing, China
Abstract:The accuracy of fingerprint identifications is critically important to the administration of criminal justice. Accuracy is challenging when two prints from different sources have many common features and few dissimilar features. Such print pairs, known as close non‐matches (CNMs), are increasingly likely to arise as ever‐growing databases are searched with greater frequency. In this study, 125 fingerprint agencies completed a mandatory proficiency test that included two pairs of CNMs. The false‐positive error rates on the two CNMs were 15.9% (17 out of 107, 95% C.I.: 9.5%, 24.2%) and 28.1% (27 out of 96, 95% C.I.: 19.4%, 38.2%), respectively. These CNM error rates are (a) inconsistent with the popular notion that fingerprint evidence is nearly infallible, and (b) larger than error rates reported in leading fingerprint studies. We conclude that, when the risk of CNMs is high, the probative value of a reported fingerprint identification may be severely diminished due to an elevated false‐positive error risk. We call for additional CNM research, including a replication and expansion of the present study using a representative selection of CNMs from database searches.
Keywords:close non‐match  error rate  false‐positive  fingerprint  fingerprint accuracy  fingerprint identification  proficiency test
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