UK & World News

  • 11 February 2013, 2:47

DNA Riddle As Twins Held In Rapes Case

French police investigating a series of rapes are perplexed after DNA evidence matched a set of twins - but they cannot tell which brother may be to blame.

With telling the difference between the twins' DNA extremely difficult and expensive, police in the southern city of Marseille have in the meantime charged both men, identified only as Elwin and Yohan, and are holding them without bail.

"It's a rather rare case for the alleged perpetrators to be identical twins," chief investigator Emmanuel Kiehl said.

The two men, both 24-year-old unemployed delivery drivers, deny any involvement in the rapes of six women between between September and January.

Police admit that without far more extensive tests it will be difficult to figure out which of the twins was possibly behind the attacks or whether both men were indeed involved.

Police tracked the twins down through video footage recorded on a bus and a mobile telephone allegedly taken from one of the victims and found in the brothers' possession.

The victims' mobile phones were taken in each of the attacks, which took place in the corridors of buildings and involved women aged 22 to 76.

Police said the victims were also able to identify the suspects, but not to tell them apart.

Mr Kiehl said DNA evidence was found at some of the crime scenes but that regular tests were incapable of differentiating between the twins.

The cost of extensive-enough tests would be "onerous", he said.

Local newspaper La Provence reported that police were told it could cost up to 1m euros (£845,000) for the necessary tests.

Only the smallest of differences exist in the DNAs of identical twins.

"For a normal analysis we compare 400 base pairs," a DNA expert told La Provence, adding that with twins: "We would be looking at billions."

 

what do you think?

2 comments

Jo James

6:14pm on 10/2/2013

Can't they do a lie detector?

Score: 6
3 replies

shirley sutton

7:05pm on 10/2/2013

Not legal in court

Score: 7

Name witheld

7:08pm on 10/2/2013

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 4

Gordon Wright

2:27pm on 11/2/2013

From Contact law.co.uk: "Currently polygraph testing is not admissible because of concerns over its accuracy. It is thought that a polygraph test is between 60% and 95% accurate, but this is not known for certain and there have been concerns that if used, the polygraph could lead juries to make decisions based on its result, leading to convictions of innocent people and non-convictions of those able to beat the polygraph".

ali baba

12:13am on 11/2/2013

Thing that could confuse it more, is they could both be guilty

Score: 1
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