Biology
Genetic Fingerprinting
British geneticist Alec Jeffreys would later call it a “eureka moment.” It was Monday morning, September 10th, 1984. Dr. Jeffreys had been working on variations in DNA at his University of Leicester laboratory for almost a decade. He found that certain sequences of DNA known as Variable Number Tandem Repeats varied widely among individuals. And because these sequences are inherited from both parents, each individual will have unique tandem repeats. At 9:05 a.m. that September morning “my life changed,” he wrote. He recognized that these repeats could be used to identify individuals. “The penny dropped and I realized we had genetic fingerprinting.”
The first legal case involving forensic DNA testing occurred two years later. In 1986, Dr. Jeffreys aided Leicestershire police by using DNA testing to clear the prime suspect in two rape and murder cases. The real killer later confessed and his DNA matched samples taken from the crime scene. Within a few years, DNA testing became commonplace in crime labs throughout the world.