0:01 Commonly, evidence found at a crime scene  will not have just one person's DNA on it,  
0:06 but will instead have a mixture of  DNA from more than one contributor.  
0:10 These mixtures are most commonly encountered in  sexual assault evidence but frequently occur in  
0:15 other types of cases as well. This animation  will show step-by-step a sample murder case  
0:21 that demonstrates just one example of how multiple  individuals DNA can end up on a piece of evidence.
0:29 Event One: the homicide victim borrows her  boyfriend's sweaty, dirty shirt to wear while  
0:35 cleaning the house residual traces of his DNA  remain in the shirt from when he last wore it.
0:44 Event Two: while working, the victim wiped  sweat from her brow with the sleeve of her shirt  
0:50 transferring some of her own DNA in the process.
0:57 At this point, multiple people have left  their genetic material on the shirt,  
1:01 causing a mixture of DNA.
1:06 Event Three: a stranger breaks into  the house and encounters the victim,  
1:10 who grabs a kitchen knife to defend herself;  through an ensuing struggle the victim cuts  
1:15 the perpetrator some of whose blood  lands on the sleeve of the shirt.
1:25 Event Four: the intruder succeeds in wrestling the  knife away from the victim and stabs her with it;  
1:31 the area surrounding her wound will have too  much of her own blood to provide a useful  
1:35 sample of anything else, so investigators  will have to test other areas of the shirt.
1:44 Event Five: the victim's roommate arrives  home and startles the perpetrator.  
1:49 She too struggles with the intruder who is still  holding the knife; the roommate sustains defensive  
1:55 wounds to the hands and forearms but is not  killed. The perpetrator ends up fleeing the scene.
2:04 Event Six: after the perpetrator has left,  the roommate goes over to check on the victim.  
2:10 Upon placing her lacerated hand on the victim's  
2:12 arm the roommate transfers her own blood to the shirt sleeve.
2:21 When the shirt arrives at the lab and is analyzed by the technician, four different sets of DNA will  
2:26 show up together on the sleeve. More clues will be necessary in order for the lab technician to  
2:32 be able to sort out the combined DNA and determine who the four contributors were.