People aren't supposed to be convicted on circumstantial evidence alone.
IANAL but I think this is very wrong.
Obviously the court will prefer strong forensic evidence if it can get it. But when it isn't, defendants can be, and are, convicted on circumstantial evidence, and this is not considered a miscarriage of justice.
If a security recording captures someone whose face can be clearly seen to be that of the defendant, and the recording shows them actually committing the crime, okay, that's pretty hard evidence. Anything short of that -- their face isn't shown clearly, perhaps, or the recording shows them being in the area but doesn't prove they actually committed the crime -- and you start having to talk about probabilities.
Even forensic evidence comes with probabilities attached. It's routine for fingerprint and DNA matches to be qualified with a probability of error. And often the true accuracy is overstated.
Assumptions. The devil is in the details. Throw too much math with too many assumptions at anyone but a panel of PhD's and you will get all kinds of misinterpretation, misunderstanding, and just plain wrongheadedness.
Certainly. My point is that, even if you don't want to discuss it, or use it, it all comes down to statistics and probability in the end. Get the most extreme proof you can imagine for somebody's guilt and that extreme certainty still comes down to probability in the end.
Noncircumstantial evidence is evidence which directly supports the point for which it is introduced, without any inference required.
Circumstantial evidence is evidence which requires a logical inference in order to support the point for which it is introduced.
That is roughly how evidence is explained by judges to juries in courtrooms.
For example, the victim's blood on the defendant's shoe is noncircumstantial evidence because it directly supports the point that the defendant was present in the vicinity of the victim's body. However, finding at the crime scene a brown fiber which is same type of fiber used to stich the defendant's very expensive, limited edition gloves, would be circumstantial evidence because you have to logically infer that the fiber found comes from the defendant's gloves. Alternatively, finding gloves that are identical to the defendant's gloves is also circumstantial evidence unless there is other evidence showing conclusively that those particular gloves are the defendants, i.e., footage of the defendant leaving the gloves there or something.
It all requires inference, though. The legal system just pretends that some inference comes "for free", and some doesn't. You never have "the victim's blood on the defendant's shoe", you have blood which you have reason to believe belongs to the victim on shoes you have reason to believe belong to the defendant. The only actual difference between your two examples is that of degree, i.e. the evidence linking the blood to the victim is much stronger than the evidence linking the fiber to the defendant.
I don't know. It seems like the defense can stipulate things that are nonetheless circumstantial evidence. Like, if the defendant acknowledges being in the area at the time, the prosecution no longer needs to deal much with evidence that establishes that, but that's still not "direct evidence" of the crime.
However, the main point of this thread of discussion I think was that even things that legally are considered "direct evidence" - say, testimony of an witness to the crime - do nonetheless involve some inference...
Your choice of examples actually supports the statistical nature of the distinction between circumstantial and noncircumstantial evidence. That the blood on the defendant's shoe came from the victim's body is based on a probabilistic test. That the blood on the defendant's shoe arrived through physical co-presence of the shoe and the blood's source body (whether or not it was the victim's) is also only "hard" evidence in the sense that other explanations are relatively improbable.
The difference between the probabilities involved in the above inferences, and the analogous inferences ineluctably underlying any hard evidence, and those involved in circumstantial evidence like your coat fiber, are purely quantitative. In some sense, hard evidence is that which can be accepted "beyond a reasonable doubt", while circumstantial evidence is that which does not pass such a test.
Unfortunately, "beyond a reasonable doubt" escapes precise definition. Yet, courts need to function, so we tacitly agree that sufficiently large quantitative differences are (legally) indistinguishable from qualitative differences.
(EDIT: I'm saying the same thing as mikeash, whose response appeared while I was writing my own)
You guys still aren't getting it; circumstantial evidence is not about the probability that the evidence is what it claims to be, it is about the necessary inference about what the evidence proves if the evidence is what it claims to be.
Noncircumstantial evidence directly supports the point for which it is introduced if the evidence is what it claims to be. The victim's blood on the defendant's shoe directly supports the point that the defendant was in the victim's presence when the victim was dying if it is established that the blood is the victim's blood.
Circumstantial evidence requires an additional inference beyond this step. The fibers are circumstantial because the fiber doesn't prove anything except that the someone wearing those gloves might have been at the crime scene at some point in time. You require the additional inference that the fiber was left at the scene at the time of the crime, which the fiber by itself does not prove but which can be "circumstantially" proved in combination with other evidence. For example, if the defendant, or some other witness, claims that the defendant was never at the scene of the crime at any point in time (specifically, but not limited to, periods prior to the crime), the presence of the rare fibers from his rare gloves is circumstantial evidence that the only time he was at the scene of the crime was when the crime occurred. In other words, the circumstances surrounding the fiber are the proof, not the fiber itself.
Your second paragraph ignores the inference required to go from victim's blood on defendant's shoe to defendant's shoe was in physical proximity to victim's body. It also ignores the inference required to go from blood is measured as matching victim's to blood came from victim's body. It also ignores the inference required to go from blood was deposited onto defendant's shoe directly by victim's body to defendant was wearing shoe at time of blood deposit and thus in presence of victim's still-bleeding corpse.
The (admittedly pedantic) point being made is that proving 'x' never directly supports anything other than the truth of 'x'. Moving from 'x' is true to 'y' is true always requires further inference.
Having something on a security recording can be classed as "hard evidence".
The case in question was one of using circumstantial evidence alone to "statistically" decide whether she was guilty or not.
And yet, aren't all types of hard evidence really just probabilistic as well? For example, there is a non-zero probability that the murderer on the security camera is merely a person with an amazing physical similarity to the defendant. If we could develop an accurate mathematical model of human physical features, we could even estimate the probability that we're looking at a double and not the defendant.
Likewise, when a DNA match is used in court, the forensic scientist typically testifies to the probability of a false match. Once again, the evidence is probabilistic.
In both of these cases, the probability of a mistake is low. But it is non-zero, and it can be quanitified--if not with current technology, then at least in principle.
So, you will never get away from deciding cases probabilistically. And if you simply refuse to assign numerical probabilities to anything even when the circumstances readily permit it, you're not increasing your chance of being right, you're just sticking your head in the sand.
Having something on a security recording can be classed as "hard evidence".
The case in question was one of using circumstantial evidence alone to "statistically" decide whether she was guilty or not.
The law differentiates between circumstantial evidence and hard evidence. People aren't supposed to be convicted on circumstantial evidence alone.