THE CASE OF THE MISSING LINKS
Where are Darwin's predicted fossils?
The discovery of DNA has revolutionized the world of forensic evidence. Cold case files have been reopened. Criminals who
thought they had beaten the system have been belatedly prosecuted by a swab of saliva or body fluids forgotten about for
decades. And in some instances, the new evidence has exonerated innocent prisoners.
Herman Atkins was just 20 years old when his life began to fall apart. He was imprisoned in January, 1986 for wounding
three people in a shooting spree in South-Central Los Angeles. Prior to his imprisonment a “Wanted” poster had
been widely circulated.
Later, at a sheriff’s substation, a 23 year-old rape victim glanced at a “Wanted” poster on a nearby
table that showed a young black fugitive from Los Angeles. In court, she testified that she turned to her mother and said,
“That’s him,” and pointed at the picture of Herman Atkins.
A clerk from an adjoining business where the attacker stopped briefly before the rape also identified Atkins. Based
primarily upon these eyewitness testimonies, the jury found Herman Atkins guilty of rape and robbery. His sentence: 47 years,
8 months in prison.
Atkins spent thirteen years, three months, and six days in state prison, but not for a crime he had committed. His cold
case had been reopened, and the DNA evidence had revealed that Atkins was not the rapist. On February 18, 2000 he walked out
a free man, the victim of mistaken identity.
Just as DNA has revolutionized criminal forensics, the work of paleontologists has shed new light on human origins. Being
an honest man, Charles Darwin made no bones (pardon the pun) about predicting that the forensic fossil evidence would
ultimately prove his theory right or wrong. (Next)
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