ABC News reports:
According  to the police report, the alleged victim was shown a police lineup of 46 photos  individually depicting all the Duke lacrosse team members except for freshman  goalie Devon Sherwood, the only black member of the team. He was excluded  because the alleged victim told police her attackers were white...
However, an eyewitness identification expert believes the police lineup  procedure was flawed because no non-lacrosse players were included. Gary Wells,  president of the American Psychology-Law Society, described it as "a  multiple-choice test without any wrong answers."
By including "fillers," or non-suspects, in a police lineup, an  accuser has to pick past the filler to choose people who actually might have  committed the crime. "Without fillers as a control, the process has no  internal credibility check," Wells said.
David Rudolf, a North Carolina defense lawyer who has been an adjunct professor  at Duke and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, believes the  procedures may be problematic to the point of being inadmissible in court.  "I have significant doubt that this will be admitted in court," he  said, "and no doubt defense will challenge it vigorously."
The issue, Rudolf explains, is that due process prohibits evidence from lineups  that are unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to mistaken identity. "When  you take the only suspect group and put it in front of the victim," Rudolf  says, "by definition you're suggesting it was one of the 46 people in that  group."
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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