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Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You turn down the request to testify.

This is the real-life decision made by forensic entomologist Gail Anderson. If forensic entomologists do testify, they're careful to say only what's supported by evidence.

"I'm not going to say anything on the stand that I don't fully believe, and I don't want to exaggerate or extrapolate any evidence," Anderson says. "It's probably so-and-so is not good enough to risk putting someone in jail for life or exonerating a killer."

To conclusively identify the insect species, a forensic entomologist would have to dissect it. Their job is to be an impartial expert witness. They have to resist pressure to be anything less than objective.

"It's very easy to get caught up in trying to help," Anderson says. "You have a certain amount of evidence. You use that. You don't try to go beyond what your expertise is and what the evidence is. You can't be better than your evidence."


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