Malleus said:
1) How far has the world's scientific community mastered genetic manipulation?
Define "genetic manipulation." It's a very broad label. What specific kinds of changes are you referring to?
2) We can clone animals, but did Dolly look EXACTLY the same as her genetic original?
Presumably not, since environment, upbringing, and chance influence our development as well as genes. Genes are just one aspect of what shapes us; we're learning that there's also epigenetics, hormonal and other factors that influence how our genes express themselves. For instance, identical twins can have the same susceptibility to a disease, but sometimes only one of them gets the disease because their environments, diets, lifestyles, histories, etc. are different, leading to epigenetic changes. I think I read once that clones of cats wouldn't necessarily have the same colors or patterns that their originals had, because the same genes can be expressed in different ways.
Also, Dolly was "born old," in a sense -- since she was cloned from adult cells, she started out with shortened telomeres. Telomeres are extra material on the ends of our DNA molecules, and they get shorter every time a cell replicates. Eventually they're gone for good and the cell stops replicating and dies. This is a major factor in aging, although it's also a safeguard against cancer. Dolly was created using DNA taken from adult cells, so her telomeres were short to begin with, probably giving her a truncated lifespan.
So there are a variety of ways in which a clone would be distinct from its original. The most obvious of which is that it's born later. Only in fiction can you create an adult clone of an adult in a matter of days or weeks. In reality, if you were cloned at 25, it would take 25 years for your clone to reach that age (outwardly, not cellularly) and you'd be 50, so obviously your clone couldn't be mistaken for you. Also he or she would've had a different upbringing and life experience, so he or she wouldn't talk or act just like you.
3) What role can biometrics play in future genetic manipulation projects, from wanting to look a little more like one's parents to looking like another stranger to looking like a new person altogether?
I'm not sure how you're using the word "biometrics" here. Biometrics are identification methods like fingerprints, voiceprints, retinal or iris scans, etc. I don't quite see how that could "play a role" in changing your appearance. Wouldn't it be the other way around? That you'd change your appearance to try to fool a biometric ID system?
And changing your appearance probably wouldn't be something you could do genetically, because, again, genes aren't everything in biology. They're just the blueprints, not the builders. Once your skeleton has grown into a certain shape, I don't think it'd be that easy to change it by manipulation on a subcellular level. Cosmetic surgery would probably be a more effective method of achieving such large-scale changes. I suppose genetic alterations on the local scale could be used to alter the way your hair grew out, the pigmentation of your skin and eyes, things like that, but only for parts of your body where cells continue to grow and be replaced. Your "core" genetics would still be your own; you'd become a chimera, an organism with two or more different genetic codes in the cells of different parts of the body.
4) To what extent can the extraction of an offspring's genes and the genes of that offspring's cousins help in reconstructing the parent's (paternal or maternal) genetic code (again, for the purpose of looking like someone else or a new person altogether)?
I doubt it could give you a definitive result, and it would be far simpler just to get a tissue sample from the parent directly -- along with photos, voice samples, video footage of their mannerisms, extensive dossiers on their lifestyles and habits, etc. Genetic tweaking of an impostor would only be one part of the process, and extensive surgery and training would be necessary as well.
5) How extensive are today's identity theft laws, especially when considering lookalikes of dead persons and lookalikes of much younger versions of much older persons?
Identity theft laws pertain to the theft of credit card numbers, social security numbers, and the like. They pertain to the
documents that we use to identify ourselves to the computers and bureaucracies of the world. They aren't about lookalikes. Why go to the immense trouble of creating a physical double of a person when you can just steal their ID numbers? After all, so much that we do these days isn't face-to-face anymore. It's mediated by computers.
True, there is a growing interest in using biometric identification as a safeguard against identity theft, and the identity thieves will no doubt seek ways around that. But obviously nobody's going to wait 20 or 30 years to create a viable adult clone of somebody, so that's right out. Cosmetic alterations and genetic alteration of surface cells and blood proteins could be used to impersonate someone, but you'd need to find an impostor who was already a good physical match for the person's facial structure, build, and voice. But again, why go to the trouble? It would probably be simpler to hack the computers and substitute your own biometric data in place of the real person's -- a high-tech equivalent for sticking your photograph onto someone else's stolen ID badge.