• Matéria: Inglês
  • Autor: rf63504
  • Perguntado 6 anos atrás

Read The text bellow and answer the following questions Free at last! POSTED 25 JAN 2001 After 12 years in prison, a Texas inmate walked free on Jan. 17. The exoneration came courtesy of University of Wisconsin-Madison law students and professors -and DNA tests proving that Christopher Ochoa, now 33, was innocent of a 1988 rape and murder. Fortunately for Ochoa, evidence from the crime was still available for DNA fingerprinting, a simple test that can prove whether a biological sample did or did not come from a suspect. The arrival of cheap and fast DNA fingerprinting is overturning the quest to convict the guilty and free the innocent. The technology is far more specific than earlier tests of antibodies in blood or semen. Terry Laber, who directed the blood laboratory at the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, says, "Before DNA, you'd have a good suspect, and do all the tests you could do, and you'd end up with 30 percent to 40 percent of the population qualifying." But when biological samples -from blood, skin cells or semen -are DNA fingerprinted, the specific DNA sequence is extremely unlikely to be found except in the perpetrator. A match, Laber says, is "very powerful evidence. " If the suspect's DNA does not match the sample, however, the test becomes convincing evidence for the defense. DNA tests have helped spring 10 people from death row since 1993, according to Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center. These 10, among 93 capital convictions that have been vacated since 1973, have helped raise public fears that executions may be based on questionable convictions. On Jan. 31, 2000, Illinois Governor George Ryan announced a "moratorium" on executions, after 13 men had been released from the state's death row. Ronald Jones, for example, was released in 1997 after being convicted of rape and murder in 1989. DNA tests did not link him to the crime scene. Dieter says the technique is so "powerful and scientifically reliable" that it can, as in Ochoa's case, even refute a confession. "The public tends to put a lot of reliance on it. It can result in a dramatic shift" in legal status. But DNA fingerprinting does not help every convict who asks for it. In September, 2000, Derek Barnebei was executed in Virginia for raping and murdering his girlfriend. The test he'd sought located his DNA in tissue taken from under the victim's fingernails after the 1993 crime. Barnebei claimed innocence to the end. While Dieter welcomes DNA's ability to illuminate guilt and innocence, he says it is "not a panacea for every case, it may not be involved in a simple shooting, where somebody dies but there are no bodily fluids left." There's also a disturbing possibility that DNA fingerprinting could finger the wrong person -if labs make mistakes, or if cops plant evidence or lie on the witness stand. Such allegations -although they do not concern capital cases -are the focus of the ongoing Los Angeles police scandal. Encontre no texto: 1. Período de Tempo em que Ochoa ficou preso. 2. Os crimes dos quais foi acusado: 3. O que ajudou a provar a inocência dele? 4. Nome do prisioneiro que não conseguiu ser inocentado com o DNA. 5.03 (três) exemplos de mostras biológicas que servem par o exame de DNA. 6. Com base no texto assinale a(s) alternativa(s) correta(s): a) Uchoa foi o único a libertar-se da pena de morte ao recorrer ao exame de D.N.A ( ) b) O exame de DNA .tanto pode inocentar como confirmar a culpa de alguém ( ) c) O fato do DNA do suspeito ser encontrado no corpo da vítima constitui u forte indício para o crime ( ) d) Não há nenhum risco na utilização do resultado da análise do DNA em processos criminais ( ) 7. As Frases abaixo foram extraídas do texto acima, diga qual o sentido dos verbos modais presentes nelas. a) a simple test that CAN prove whether a biological sample did or did not come from a suspect. _____________________________________________________________ b) Before DNA, you'd have a good suspect, and do all the tests you COULD do. ____________________________________________________________ c)... raise public fears that executions MAY be based on questionable convictions. _____________________________________________________________ d) that it CAN, as in Ochoa's case, even refute a confession. ______________________________________________________________ e)..."not a panacea for every case, it MAY not be involved in a simple shooting... _____________________________________________________________ f) DNA fingerprinting COULD finger the wrong person. ______________________________________________________________

Respostas

respondido por: wagnerhenriquemarx
2

5. Impressao digital, celulas da pele ou semen

6. Alternativa B

7. A) possibilidade

B) habilidade

C) possibilidade

D) possibilidade

e) possibilidade

F) habilidade

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