“…In child sexual abuse cases, strong evidence such as DNA and medical evidence (Bradshaw & Marks, 1990;Golding et al, 2000), defendant criminal history (Bottoms & Goodman, 1994), and credible expert evaluations (Kovera, Levy, Borgida, & Penrod, 1994) increase, and weak (Castelli, Goodman, & Ghetti, 2005), decreases convictions. We designed our cases to be weak, neutral, or strong in terms of case evidence, pretested to ensure this would be reflected in verdicts, and predicted that evidence strength would moderate the effects of other variables in line with Kalven and Zeisel's, (1966) "liberation hypothesis," which suggests that jurors' biases influence verdicts most when the evidence is ambiguous, because ambiguous evidence liberates jurors' from evidentiary constraints (Devine et al, 2001;Kassin & Wrightsman, 1988; but see Leippe & Romanczyk, 1987).…”