Straight using Bayes' theorem will result in overconfidence. Bias tends to correlate. If you guessed too high on one probability, it's likely that you did on another. In addition, the bias will multiply with each piece of evidence. I'd certainly use Bayes' theorem, but I'd try to correct for overconfidence at the end.
I have only just come across this discussion (the original article referred to my work). The article
Fenton, N.E. and Neil, M. (2011), 'Avoiding Legal Fallacies in Practice Using Bayesian Networks'
was published in the Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 36, 114-151, 2011 (Journal ISSN 1440-4982) A pre-publication pdf can be found here:
https://www.eecs.qmul.ac.uk/~norman/papers/fenton_neil_prob_fallacies_June2011web.pdf
The point about the use of the likelihood ratio (to enable us to evaluate the probative value of evidence without having to propose sub...
"The mathematical mistakes that could be undermining justice"
The linked paper is "Avoiding Probabilistic Reasoning Fallacies in Legal Practice using Bayesian Networks" by Norman Fenton and Martin Neil. The interesting parts, IMO, begin on page 9 where they argue for using the likelihood ratio as the key piece of information for evidence, and not simply raw probabilities; page 17, where a DNA example is worked out; and page 21-25 on the key piece of evidence in the Bellfield trial, no one claiming a lost possession (nearly worthless evidence)
Related reading: Inherited Improbabilities: Transferring the Burden of Proof, on Amanda Knox.