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One For The Criminologists

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rocketpost1 | 23:20 Sun 01st Dec 2013 | Law
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Just a hypothesis. A man has a blood transfusion and commits a murder say within a few days. If blood is found at the crime scene, it is possible that a DNA profile could point to the blood donor rather than the recipient ?.
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See here: http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1418/does-a-blood-donation-mess-up-dna-evidence
23:53 Sun 01st Dec 2013
I thought if you had a blood donation it had to match your original blood?
No it doesn't. I'm B but I can accept blood from O.

I'd be wondering how someone who was poorly enough to have a blood transfusion was up and about committing a murder a couple of days later.
I think the DNA is altered if the man has had a transplant of bone marrow or something - something of this sort happened in a crime drama, as usual I can't remember the exact details!
Red blood cells don`t carry DNA and most transfusions have red blood cells, not white.
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Thanks Jim360. That's the perfect explanation. Thanks also to 237SJ for the information regarding red blood cells which I didn't know.

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