“…Indeed, in this model of updating beliefs, the LR takes into account all the information that has been communicated to the scientist in the context of the case, but is also implicitly supposed to include those to which they would have had access, either legally or not by their employment position, training, experience or civil life (e.g., information in the press) (Dror, 2020a; Whitman & Koppl, 2010). Even though the debate has remained lively on this decision, it is doubtful that Bayes' theorem, presented as the mathematical quintessence of this transparency, is sufficient to satisfy this expected quality (Aitken et al, 2011; Aitken & Taroni, 2004; Biedermann & Taroni, 2006a, 2002; Dawid, 2002; Dawid et al, 2011; Fenton et al, 2013; Finkelstein & Fairley, 1970; Hahn, 2014; Jackson et al, 2015; Roberts & Aitken, 2014; Robertson et al, 2016; Schaapveld et al, 2019; Sironi et al, 2016; Smit et al, 2016; Taroni et al, 2004). Considering the LR as encompassing implicitly all this information could fall short of labeling transparent any opinion, restricted to the evaluative phase.…”