Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Forensic DNA Policy and Funding Update:

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Forensic DNA Policy and Funding Update:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Forensic DNA Policy and Funding Update:
Emerging Trends in the United States and Abroad Presented by : Gordon Thomas Honeywell Government Affairs Tim Schellberg Lisa Hurst September 29, 2016

2 UNITED STATES

3 United States: DNA Database Expansion
* FELONY ARRESTEE LAWS: 29 States and Federal Government *Plus Minnesota MISDEMEANOR CONVICTION LAWS: 7 States and Federal Government *Plus Minnesota *

4 Legal Challenges to Database Expansion
Harris v. Buza State Appeals Court: Violation of State Constitution (initiated in 2009) State Supreme Court: Briefs submitted, Oral arguments not scheduled Minnesota case 2006 – Appeals court ruling: violation of state and federal search and seizure rights (4th Amendment) 2015 – Dakota County resumes collections 2016 – Dakota County Sheriff v. Emerson October 13, 2016 – Oral Arguments

5 US FEDERAL ACTIVITY… RAPID DNA Act -- HR 320 / S 2348 – Passed Senate
Justice For All Act – HR 4602 / S 2577 – Passed Senate Larger mandatory percentage of funding for DNA backlog and capacity grants Additional reporting on efficacy of DNA grant funding Reauthorizes post conviction DNA grants and Coverdell grants Sexual Assault Survivor Rights Act (S 2613 / HR 5578) – Passed Senate / Passed House “right to be informed of any result of a sexual assault evidence collection kit, including a DNA profile match, toxicology report, or other information collected as part of a medical examination”

6 US FEDERAL ACTIVITY… FEDERAL GRANT FUNDING…STATUS QUO
Fiscal Year 2017 funding proposal = FY 2016 levels Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Elimination Grants (CEBR grants) Sexual Assault Forensic Exam – Inventory, Tracking, Reporting Grants (SAFE-ITR) Sexual Assault Kit Initiative grants (SAKI) Possible change to NIJ grant allotment and structure

7 RAPE KIT REFORM Comprehensive reform, including audit of kits and mandatory submission timelines Statewide accounting of untested kits

8 RAPE KIT REFORM: MAJOR THEMES
REPORT: Statewide Audits: 25 states REFORM: Submission Timelines: 17 States Analysis Timelines: 10 States NEW TRENDS: Victim Notification: 12 States Right to be informed of status / location Right to be notified if no testing Right to be notified of results / no results Right to be notified of match Periodic Reports: 9 States Rape Kit Tracking: 3 states

9 RAPE KIT BACKLOGS: IMPROVING RESULTS
40% to 60% success rate reported in obtaining CODIS eligible profiles SANE Training is important…but problems persist Minute samples Degraded evidence Complex mixtures Opportunity for Next Generation Sequencing…

10 Next Generation Sequencing and Forensics…
Assumptions: CE will continue to be the “go to” for the majority of casework NGS is a valuable solution for: Difficult samples: complex mixtures, degraded samples, very minute evidence Phenotype-based investigative leads

11 NGS POLICY CONSIDERATIONS
What types of cases? How and with whom is data shared? Should SNPs for disease prediction be considered? What about “appearance” SNPs? Race may be a private issue Will defense bar demand access?

12 CONCLUSIONS: Adoption of NGS into Workflow
Forensic DNA must not lose the public trust Regulatory framework needed to set standards for what is allowable Labs should develop written policies regarding NGS use: What types of cases How and with whom will the data be shared What types of data / SNPs Smaller targeted panels are best – do not take more than you need Use must be FORENSICALLY RELEVANT AND FORENSICALLY RESPONSIBLE

13 GLOBAL OVERVIEW

14 54 COUNTRIES HAVE IMPLEMENTED NATIONAL PROGRAMS
OVER 70 MILLION OFFENDER SAMPLES Australia Finland Macedonia South Korea Austria France Malaysia Spain Bahrain Germany Mauritius Sweden Barbados Hong Kong Norway Switzerland Belarus Hungary Oman Taiwan Belgium Iceland Panama United Arab Emirates Brazil Ireland Poland Canada Israel Portugal United Kingdom Czech Republic Japan Qatar United States Chile Jordan Romania Uruguay China Kuwait Russia Croatia Latvia Lithuania Slovenia Cyprus Slovakia Denmark Netherlands Singapore Estonia New Zealand South Africa These countries have implemented legislation/polices on a national basis to database the DNA of a defined category of criminal offender

15 Criminal Offender DNA Databases - Simply Awesome!
But despite the accolades and the data, the global public safety community has not advanced the databases to their true potential Few countries have built a reference database capable of high hit rates Casework comparisons to the database are low

16 The Unmet Potential of DNA Databases
Over 60% of all casework is from property crimes

17 The Unmet Potential of DNA Databases

18 Are 54 Countries and 70 million samples impressive numbers?
Unmet Potential: Are 54 Countries and 70 million samples impressive numbers? 50 Countries 11 Million samples

19 Stagnant Database Establishment and Expansion
Cultural Focus Not on Solving / Preventing Crime Legal Problems Senior Government Official Awareness Privacy concerns Lack of Advocacy

20

21 SIGN UP TO FOLLOW DNAResource on TWITTER


Download ppt "Forensic DNA Policy and Funding Update:"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google