Exercise
Probability theory was used in a famous court
case: People v. Collins.[Notes 1] In this case a purse was snatched from an elderly person in a Los Angeles suburb. A couple seen running from the scene were described as a black man with a beard and a mustache and a blond girl with hair in a ponytail. Witnesses said they drove off in a partly yellow car. Malcolm and Janet Collins were arrested. He was black and though clean shaven when arrested had evidence of recently having had a beard and a mustache. She was blond and usually wore her hair in a ponytail. They drove a partly yellow Lincoln. The prosecution called a professor of mathematics as a witness who suggested that a conservative set of probabilities for the characteristics noted by the witnesses would be as shown in Table.
{\rm man with mustache} | 1/4 \cr{\rm girl with blond hair} | 1/3 \cr{\rm girl with ponytail} | 1/10 \cr{\rm black man with beard} | 1/10 \cr{\rm interracial couple in a car} | 1/1000 \cr{\rm partly yellow car} | 1/10 \cr |
The prosecution then argued that the probability that all of these
characteristics are met by a randomly chosen couple is the product of the
probabilities or 1/12,00,00, which is very small. He claimed this was proof
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants were guilty. The jury agreed
and handed down a verdict of guilty of second-degree robbery.
If you were the lawyer for the Collins couple how would you have countered the
above argument? (The appeal of this case is discussed in
Exercise \ref{sec 5.1}..)
Notes