The promise and perils of DNA evidence
In this occasional series, The Times examines the promise and perils of the growing use of DNA evidence in the courtroom. Have a story tip? Contact [email protected] or [email protected].
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Though many cases involving the 5,123 unprocessed kits have been closed, evidence in more than 400 crimes could still lead to suspects, officials say.
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815 sexual assault cases with untested DNA and no suspects have been tallied so far; statute has expired on 51 of them.
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The police union warns members that submitting genetic evidence could lead to invasions of privacy. Department officials say the practice is needed to investigate serious use-of-force cases.
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By far the most reliable forensic science, it still has limits: Samples can be contaminated and may go untested for years. And collecting it may violate privacy laws.
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California’s familial searching policy, the most extensive in the nation, looks for genetic ties between culprits and kin. Privacy advocates and legal experts are nervous.
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The department plans a case-by-case review to see which sexual assault kits remain unexamined. The revelation follows reports of a similar DNA backlog at the LAPD.
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Law enforcement agencies that had not used full allocations from previous years found their grants reduced despite an estimated 400,000 untested cases.
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City officials acknowledge that the funding of the $700,000 effort is uncertain. The proposal is scheduled for a City Council vote Wednesday.