California Initiative to Expand DNA Database 386
vervais_sucks writes "A California attorney is personally bankrolling, to the sum of $1.3m, an initiative to require law enforcement to take DNA samples of every person they arrest for a felony." The (lengthy) initiative is available here (search for DNA on the page).
I agree with this (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Slightly different opinion. (Score:5, Interesting)
#2. All DNA samples take from #1 are to be PURGED COMPLETELY from any databases after 30 days.
#3. All people CONVICTED of FELONIES will have their DNA taken again (the last sample was purged in #2). This sample can stay in the databases forever.
#4. Any DNA samples will ONLY be used to compare to other DNA samples from criminal cases. No scanning for violent dispositions (as you mentioned) nor any paternity suits or ANYTHING.
#5. All DNA matching will require at least double blind. I don't trust cops.
#6. There will be random checks done (no less than
I think DNA matching is good idea, but I don't trust the cops with it. I want lots of checks and balances and I want non-convict DNA records to be deleted. Keep the honest cops honest and don't keep records on innocent citizens.
Re:Slightly different opinion. (Score:3, Insightful)
What?!
No way.
Absoultely not.
Not to test the citizens, to test the system. (Score:5, Interesting)
I want double blind tests of clean DNA submitted at random intervals to "prove" that the system will not flag the innocent.
If clean DNA is run and it comes back saying that it is linked to a crime, it shows that there is a problem with the system.
The important thing to remember is that any DNA matching will just about "prove" that you're "guilty" of that crime. It will be up to you to show that you didn't do it.
Given that humans will be involved, there will be mistakes. So the planning has to include methods of testing for errors. And repeated, random, testing.
Also, a series of checks to see where and why those errors were made and a review process to fix the problem(s) as they are identified.
Don't trust the cops.
Don't trust the lab technicians.
Don't trust anyone involved with it.
Re:Not to test the citizens, to test the system. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not to test the citizens, to test the system. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Slightly different opinion. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see this happening once law enforcement starts liking the power they have with all this new information. No government organization will willingly give up saved data.
Re:Slightly different opinion. (Score:3, Insightful)
#2. All DNA samples take from #1 are to be PURGED COMPLETELY from any databases after 30 days.
You mean, just like the database of people submitting to a background check for purchase of a firearm was purged [gunowners.org] (search for "Texas"), as requred by law? Yeah, I trust my government to scrub the database like it says it will.
Say, did I hear something about a bridge for sale?
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
have a drivers "license"? (Score:2, Informative)
It's in effect in all 50 states and in DC now. Some areas are already doing this at "random courtesty checkpoints", where everyone is stopped and checked, and if you refuse, they are authorised the use of force to make you c
Re:have a drivers "license"? (Score:4, Interesting)
The truth is that "implied consent" laws don't give the cops carte blanche to take a blood sample.
For example, in California, the cops must charge you with DUI or other violation or have a reasonable suspicion that you are intoxicated. They can't just stop you on a whim and ask you for a blood sample. And yes, implied consent exists, but contrary to what you stated, there is no "use of force" authorized. However, you will have your license suspended and face jail time if the offense is upheld. (Note, California laws are particularly stringent - AFAIK not all states have will give you jail time for merely refusing to take the test. Also, even in California, bloodwork is currently taken to test for drug/alcohol content, not for DNA samples.)
> YMMV
Ha-ha. Indeed.
So in sum, there is a kernel of truth in what you are saying, but in reality things are not nearly so dire.
Re:I agree with this (Score:3, Informative)
We DNA anyone brought in for a felony, or when their charge is one of several on a special list, like Battery on a Teacher, Anything having to do with Domestic Violence, etc.
We DNA through a Buccal Swab (Cheek cell swab with a big Q-tip). If and when someone is convicted, they are DNA'ed again, with a blood sample.
The database is never purged, and once in, you are in. Period.
Do I agree? I take these samples, and when they trained us, we swabbed each oth
So, there are two of us, at least. (Score:2, Insightful)
Just like IP address. Only longer. You got mine already, what's the difference if y
Criminals aren't the only ones! (Score:2)
Peace
Re:Criminals aren't the only ones! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I agree with this (Score:4, Insightful)
And the potential for abuse is just too huge a risk. And since fingerprints can distinguish beteen identical twins, it should be obvious even to the casual observer that physical uniqueness is determined by more than the entire DNA sequence. Moreover, we already have fingerprinting, so what's the need for DNA? My guess is that the other uses of DNA are too compelling, such as letting insurance companies determine your premiums against worst-case risks, while simultaneously disqualifying coverage for diseases you likely would contract.
I read somewhere (can't find the reference ATM) that the portion of DNA that is PCR'd for identification purposes repeats about 1:400. My guess that in some rural communities and suburban or urban ghettos it might even be more frequently repeated in the sample population.
I am left to wonder how much money this politician, his relatives, heirs, assigns, financial backers, etc., have invested in DNA fingerprinting companies and databasing companies...
Re:I agree with this (Score:5, Informative)
In fact, most forensic DNA work was originally done using RFLP mapping, which doesn't involve sequencing anything at all. Sequencing is relatively recent. Most (all?) of the databases are still based on RFLP.
If you bothered to read the literature, you'd find that there's been a great deal of study of exactly how reliable it is in various circumstances. Also, if you think about it for a minute, you'll realize that there's no a priori reason to care about what percentage of the genome is examined; the question is how much variability there is in the part that is examined. Additional variability in the unexamined parts has nothing to do with the reliability of the test.
A criminologist is a social scientist who deals with the motivations and social contexts of crimes. You are thinking of "criminalists", or "forensic DNA examiners", who are the people who do crime lab work.
I know a lot of these people personally; it so happens that one of my parents was involved in the development of forensic DNA from the beginning. Some of the people I know are involved with things like the Innocence Project [innocenceproject.org]. Some of them are private practitioners who typically testify for the defense; if those people have a bias, it's toward clearing people, not toward nailing the innocent.
I have never heard any of them say that they would never use DNA evidence to uniquely identify somebody. Not once.
I have heard many of them say, loudly and repeatedly, that there are circumstances under which they wouldn't use DNA to "finger" anybody, including, but probably not limited to, cases where there's a possibility that a close relative of the suspect was involved, cases where samples were degraded or contaminated. I've never heard them say that they'd never do it. I have heard them say, rather vehemently, that DNA is a lot more reliable than the old serological tests that put a lot of people into prison in the 1970s and 1980s.
Of course, DNA is also more reliable than eyewitnesses, but then almost anything is more reliable than an eyewitness.
No, you can't apply DNA, or any other technique, mechanically, but to say that it's intrinsically unusable is just silly. It's about the most reliable thing out there.
Think about how you're using it.
Re:I agree with this (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that law enforcement does not understand how to use DNA. It's true that DNA uniquely identifies an individual (well, to the level of twins and such). However, that is only if you do a very extensive DNA comparison. They don't do this in law enforcement. That is expensive. They only do a comparison at a few points, and that doesn't uniquely identify a person.
What this means is that when used in a Bayesian manner, DNA evidence is very powerful, but when used independently, it sucks. So, for example, if there is a crime, and they have recovered samples from the crime scene, and then, based on other means, they have identified you, me, and a few other people as suspects, and my DNA matches the samples, then it's pretty much a lock--those are my samples. On the other hand, if they just take the samples, run them through their DNA database, and I am the only match, that is pretty much worthless.
An analogy would be if they somehow could tell from evidence at a crime scene the last two digits of the criminal's social security number and the last two digits of the criminal's phone number. If they have three suspects acquired through traditional means, and one has a matching SSN and phone number, that is pretty clearly their man. If, however, they just go to the phone book, find all matching phone numbers, and then check their SSNs and find a match, and that's all they have, they have nothing. There will be plenty of other people that match.
That's basically how DNA matches are done. They compare at a few bases, which is kind of like comparing phone and SSN numbers at a few digits.
Re:I agree with this (Score:5, Interesting)
One thing that is hard to do with finger prints is to leave someone else's at a crime scene. With DNA, however, it is not so difficult to imagine a whole new business starting up, which is the collection of DNA junk and bottling it.
So there you are, a smarter felon than usual, you commit some terrible crime, but you thoughtfully get out your DNA bomb, and set it off just like an insect fogger, painting the crime scene with the DNA of 100,000 individuals --- and in far greater quantity than what you left. If you've been a little careful, you'll generate a sufficient quantity of chaos to
So: if you wonder where could you get a bunch of junk DNA without working too hard
I'm feeling a bit foolish about actually describing a potentially lucrative business opportunity. I take it all back. Move along, move along, nothing to see here.
Re:I agree with this (Score:4, Insightful)
It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:4, Insightful)
Well we don't exactly throw out the justice system because it's imperfect do we? Fact of the matter is sometimes some one is going to be wrongly convicted, so should we stop putting people in prison or taking their fingerprints because they might really be innocent?
People aren't thrown in jail because they are guilty, or kept out because they are innocent. People are punished under the law because a jury of their peers found them guilty in a (supposed to be) fair trial. Moreover, in America, criminal juries must reach a unanimous decision, else we have a mistrial and no verdict is found. It shouldn't be all that often that 12 jurers all reach the same guilty verdict concerning a man whom is innocent. I can't imagine coming up with a more fair system, or one more likely not to imprison innocent people (at the risk of letting guilty people go free).
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:3, Interesting)
Wrongly arrested have legal recourse. Perhaps they can get it removed, but how often are people really "wrongly arrested"?
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:4, Insightful)
http://caag.state.ca.us/cjsc/publications/candd
Also, DNA gets you a lot more than a fingerprint does. You only get a fingerprint under good conditions (such as, the person wasn't wearing gloves), but you can gather DNA evidence much more frequently. This is especially useful in sexual assault cases, but there are a lot of instances where DNA is left at a crime scene even when no fingerprints are left behind.
DNA also can tell you a lot more about a person than a fingerprint. Even if you don't have the person's DNA on file, you can still develop a profile of the person given a good DNA sample. You can get the person's race and sex, at the very least. All that having a fingerprint of a person tells you is that they have a finger.
OTOH, DNA would be a bit easier to plant than a fingerprint (leave a few hair samples from someone else at the crime scene) than it would be to leave a fake fingerprint.
I'd not be overly concerned if the government had my DNA on file, as I don't generally commit those kinds of crimes
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:4, Informative)
This is complete BS. A DNA fingerprint does not work on the same markers that are used for determining these features. You will get the person's gender (e.g XX or XY) but that is it. It will not tell you that person's ethnicity, age, eye color, tendency to get diabetes in old age, or anything else that other genetic testing can determine.
It is just a pattern that happens to be unique to a particular individual (or set of individuals in the case of identitical twins) that came from a particular zygote.
Please keep the hysterical FUD to a minimum.
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:5, Insightful)
You are kidding, right?
E.g, http://www.caught.net/innoc.htm: For every seven executed, one innocent person is freed-an "error rate" of more than twelve (12) percent. In the State of Illinois, 12 people have been executed since 1977 while 13 have been released after proving they are innocent ...
And that is just for the most serious crimes, where the evidence is checked much more thoroughly.
I would imagine tens or hundreds thousand people are wrongly arrested every year.
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:3, Interesting)
If my view if someone is found guilty, any lawyer representing them must answer to perjury charges depending on the circumstances (as well as the defendant). This is also quite pla
Not clear cut, more information is required. (Score:3, Insightful)
The question then is if DNA sampling is part of a reasonable arrest. The fears expressed in the article were:
"DNA is not like a fingerprint, since getting it is more invasive and it holds information bey
Re:Not clear cut, more information is required. (Score:5, Insightful)
How about if a violence gene is identified and those who have it get a +1 guilty in their court trials just because of that?
Re:Not clear cut, more information is required. (Score:2)
Pre-disposition to any number of diseases, neuroses, personality traits, etc, etc. In the wrong hands, that information could be used to say, deny you any and all health insurance in perpetuity, even if you never develop any of the diseases hinted at by your DNA.
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:2)
Yeah, like OJ!!
*ducks
Re:It sounds a little bit like overkill (Score:3, Insightful)
This is more of a self imposed lack of freedom. It's begged for!
For Safetys Sake! Take some Soma!
Look on the bright side (Score:2, Funny)
wow! (Score:2, Interesting)
Good for a couple reasons (Score:4, Insightful)
Second - should someone be sentenced to death, reversing said conviction/sentencing is easier if you have DNA evidence to back up claims. Though, I suppose it sucks for the criminal if they then do some retests, and the final verdict of the testing is that you did it.
Arrested != tried or convicted (Score:2)
Presumption of innocence..? hello...? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Presumption of innocence..? hello...? (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether you trust them to do so is another point, especially given the next sentence which says that if (by accident, of course) they don't delete it, and you get convicted of something based on that evidence, that conviction stands.
Security standards for that database are somewhat underspecified.
Article 5 is all about expungment of the samples. Basically, you request in writing that you've been cleared of all charges, and if nobody objects, they have to destroy it within half a year.
Again, whether you trust them to actually do it... well, we trust the police to carry guns, don't we?
Re:Presumption of innocence..? hello...? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Presumption of innocence..? hello...? (Score:2, Insightful)
Under the initiative, those acquitted have to petition to court to remove their sample. Seems like an undue burden after being falsely accused. I'd be more likely to support the initiative if the samples were only taken after conviction.
From the article:
Although the initiative allows people to have their DNA information pulled from the database and destroyed if they have been found innocent or released without charges, it requires a court order and a complicated stack of paperwork before it can be do
Re:Presumption of innocence..? hello...? (Score:2)
Re:That's what they all say (Score:3, Interesting)
After all, if it's there and it's your DNA, you had to have been there!
Hair samples are really easy to get and even easier to drop.
I promise that this will happen without this law, but this is only going to make it go faster.
How long until some thug decides it's easy to walk past you, grab some of your hair (just one or two strands that you won't even notice), kill someone, drop the hair on the victim and then tip the cops that it was you?
The ways that are possible to get thi
Gee, sounds like.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Why stop there? (Score:2, Funny)
Collect baby DNA? Been there, done that... (Score:3, Informative)
too far (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:too far (Score:3, Insightful)
How about other people getting into the data base by just joining a police force?
Think about how easy that would be?
You could join the police force and get paid to have access to these records.
Everyone they arrest? (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps some cop looking for a promotion would just plant some DNA evidence at the scene to make sure you get convicted.
I'd have to say if a cop told me to give him a DNA sample, I'd respond "blow me" :-)
Re:Everyone they arrest? (Score:2, Insightful)
It really goes (Score:2)
Blond-haired officer Lt. Susie Cox asks for your DNA you say "You'll have to take it?"
She says "Maybe I will, I haven't had anything to eat today and I'm just starving."
And you say "Well feast on this..." [flop]
[cue some Al Green]
Yikes, I've even disturbed myself.
Re:Everyone they arrest? (Score:2)
No. Not only that, but when a cop pulls you over and runs your ID, it's your arrest record that comes up, not your conviction record. Same applies when you're convicted of a crime: the judge gets to see all of your arrests, and often if you were not convicted, the record just says "disposition not given" or something like that. I met a guy in jail who had been accused and aquitted of rape (the girl in q
'arrested'? (Score:5, Insightful)
An interesting film based on the premise of too much focus on DNA tracking is GATTACA.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:'arrested'? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:'arrested'? (Score:2)
I don't get it (Score:4, Insightful)
Yippie! (Score:3, Interesting)
All they do is process it and record the CODIS score which is completely useless for anything but ID. If fact, knowing your CODIS for family members is a good thing, since there are alot of ways you can die where DNA is all that's left.
It can't reveal that you have geek genes and so women shouldn't risk sex with you, so slashdoters can all relax.
And a cheak swab is not exactly "invasive", the fingerprinting process is much more likely to involve the police having to beat you to unconsciousness.
There is a brighter side to all of this (Score:2, Funny)
The next step (Score:5, Insightful)
This sounds eminently reasonable, though I'm not sure I like the "arrested for a felony" part, it would be much more reasonable to use convictions. But they print you on arrest, so why shouldn't they take your DNA too, right?
Ah, but they fingerprint you for a drivers' license too. They didn't, at one time, but now they do. Because the argument was made that, well, if we take your prints on arrest, why shouldn't we take them for a drivers license too? That will, of course, be the next step.
I would actually be completely in favor of this if we had a resonable law enforcement system, which we don't, and if there were any way to assure that this will not be used as an argument for taking DNA from everyone, which there isn't. As it is, I think this sort of thinking needs to be stopped before it spreads.
Gattaca, here we come? (Score:2, Insightful)
Iceland has recently had a major controversy [actionbioscience.org] over creating a general DNA database of the people. Maybe if we can't learn from fiction, we can from reality.
Question (Score:5, Insightful)
But would it be possible to store a hash of a person's DNA? I know that people who run open source software typically check any sort of download for MySQL, PHP, or anything else for that matter against an MD5 string? Now, why couldn't somebody's DNA sequencing match against something like SHA1 or MD5?
I figure it might have to do with mutations / etc screwing up the hash generated. But isn't there some kind of hash that could compensate for that sort of thing?
I'm just wondering if there's a way of matching DNA without storing sensitive information like possible health defects, etc..
Personally, I would not mind something like this used for homocide or rape. I'm just concerned, like everyone else, that this will be a slippery slope towards other things.
Hashes have collisions (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hashes have collisions (Score:2)
If you can produce a unique set of dna markers, you would be able to run it through a given hash function without fear of a collision.
Re:Hashes have collisions (Score:3, Insightful)
They just have an enzyme that cuts the DNA at specific markers which appear at different locations in the DNA for different people, normally there's a dozen or so of these cuts. And then they run some water over them that pushes the different segments along a plate. The longer the string of DNA that was cut, the heavier it is and the shorter the distance it goes along the plate. So you end up with a bandin
Re:Question (Score:5, Insightful)
Jeez, I wish people would find out about the technology (it IS
You know, (supposed) technologists talking to politicians is a very dangerous combination..
Can you say "knee-jerk"? (Score:3, Interesting)
If you are arrested for something you didn't do, then yes, you will be more likely to be caught for a subsequent crime you did commit. Thing is, you did commit the crime. This is nothing more than extra efficiency for law enforcement. We should thank these folks for decreasing costs and increasing convictions.
DNA ca't be faked. (Score:3, Interesting)
We are talking about peole who have only been arrested, not convicted. Persons who are convicted fellons can already be made to give DNA samples in Califorina.
If this rich bastard is so gung ho for this then he can be the first person to give a DNA sample after all he has nothing to hide. Tjis is a asshat idea that will only be loved by ass hats, cro
Re:DNA ca't be faked. (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't buy this. If they simply sequence your DNA and store the results in an electronic database somewhere, then where do you think they can produce enough blood/urine/semen/hair, etc to "plant" at a crime scene? Unless there is a significant amount at the crime scene, I doubt it would be useful in court.
If they have already picked out someone to frame, they could accomplish this today by just going to your house and taking some hair
Re:Can you say "knee-jerk"? (Score:3, Insightful)
It appears after your 2004 arrest (without conviction) that your DNA profile has come up in a new and ongoing criminal case. As a result, you are now a "person of interest" and subsequently unable to apply for security clearance of any level. We have also taken the liberty of informing your employer who btw formally requests you do not return to work tomorrow. We will release your friends and family members from questioning shortly.
Yours truly,
The Secret Service
Gee, no potential for abuse here. All
Re:Can you say "knee-jerk"? (Score:4, Insightful)
search seizure? (Score:2, Insightful)
if you have just been 'arrested' aren't you still presumed innocent?
why should a 'false' arrest get's people's DNA into some big brotherish database. and isn't my DNA mine does the Gov really have the right to 'seize my DNA???'
Public Office (Score:3, Insightful)
Big Brother is watching! (Score:5, Insightful)
Putting
Americans
Through
Rediculously
Inhumane
Opression
and
Tyranny
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Benjamin Franklin
"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel." -- Patrick Henry
Peace
An inevitable scenario. (Score:5, Insightful)
Now Imagine the possibilities with DNA evidence, as it is, DNA is becoming very relied upon for convictions, and the police are getting overly reliant on it. In the future, someone arrested and sampled may get a full iron clad water tight conviction over a laboratory error. A mix up of the DNA sample taken, and a DNA sample taken from the scene of the crime...
This isn't even taking into account the fact that a crooked cop could find it very easy to contaminate a crime scene sample with DNA taken from a suspect.
These concerns could be overcome with good safegaurding, and good laboratory practise, but if the past is anything to go by, it's time to get paranoid.
Re:An inevitable scenario. (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you know what a felony is? (Score:5, Informative)
That's right, he sprayed graffiti on someone's house when he was 18 and now he's a felon for life. And he gets a DNA sample taken.
How about people with more than $200 of pot on them? People who accidentally cut fiberoptic cables while digging in their backyards?
Do people not realize how idiotic laws are in this country? More than 30 states still consider it a felony to have sex out of wedlock!
Further background (Score:5, Informative)
The ACLU is doing what they can to slow or stop it.
Here's some informative blog entries:
http://www.jefallbright.net/node/view/1780
http://www.socallawblog.com/archives/001186.html
Idiots!! (Score:4, Insightful)
And as usual the guy responsible has a ROCK SOLID excuse.
"People I love were killed!!"
Oh really! How awful! I guess it's OK to lead us all one step closer to a police state then! Here Swab me first!!!!
Of course he'll call us all heartless cranks who want criminals to get off and he'll say that this won't REALLY undermine democracy. Just like the PATRIOT act!
God I hate these people. Why didn't he donate his money to funding more social programmes that reduce the amount of criminals at an early stage! But I guess that just wouldn't be as efftive as having a poorly administered DNA database now would it.
This is why initiatives suck (Score:4, Interesting)
~SL
Re:This is why initiatives suck (Score:3, Interesting)
These shows, while entertaining have little connnection with reality. When was the last time you saw a forensic analysis interogating suspects?
California adventure (Score:5, Interesting)
On the way back I was detained by Redding PD on suspicion of public intoxication. They took me to the station for full prints, DNA and history check. They held me until morning. I was never arrested or charged (I have a clean record). I was detained because the PD was conducting an emphasis patrol on a troublesome motel.
The application of civil rights in California has slipped somewhat, I believe. I left California the next day and have not returned since. I would I recommend California as a good place to visit or do business.
Re:California adventure (Score:4, Interesting)
That said, we are quite accepting of the idea that people can be photographed upon arrest, and that these photos can be used to pursue suspects in unrelated crimes.
I understand the fears involved, but if our government would be more receptive to the concepts behind such words as "oversight" "transparency" and "accountability," a nationwide database of all citizens' dna could be of great benefit in many ways, the least of which may be crimefighting. Certainly it could provide a treasure trove of data for medical research.
DNA fingerprinting can screw up! (Score:5, Interesting)
For instance, look up a British case [austlii.edu.au] (another link [straitstimes.com.sg]), where the DNA from a blood sample found at the crime scene was compared against Britain's national database. A match was found, with odds of 1 in 37 million of being wrong. The man was convicted of the crime.
The problem? He had advanced Parkinson's disease and lived 320 km from the crime scene. He couldn't even dress himself, let alone drive a car.
The problem is one of comparision - since you can't compare the entire 3 trillion base pair genome, you have to make do by comparing a small part of it - which, while it may have a "1 in 37 million" chance of being wrong, might actually be wrong after all.
Re:DNA fingerprinting can screw up! (Score:4, Insightful)
So if one add the human errors (even reasonably smart peolpe like lab techs sometimes fail) the odds are below 1 in 10000. So if California checks their db with 1 million "records" they will get 100 false positives. Scary stuff.
But I guess this is up to the standards in California, because only criminals leave DNA samples on the scene. And since the people do have a felony history they are obviously guilty as the criminals they are..
Re:DNA fingerprinting can screw up! (Score:3, Insightful)
More likely, the means motive and opportunity can be strung together out of tenuous circumstantial "evidence" once the DNA match has found the One True Perpetrator.
Let's start with the politicians (Score:3, Funny)
I have no big problem with... (Score:3, Insightful)
sucks for people falsely accused (Score:5, Informative)
well, there i am, at home in my pajamas one morning and a knock at the door. two police officers, one local, one state trooper, ask if they can come in. being completely naive and a bit frightened i let them in.
they tell me that half a dozen homes were robbed in broad daylight and that neighbors said they saw a man fitting my dark complexion driving up and down the street days in advance of the robberies.
i explain (to no avail) to the officers that i had been on that road exactly *once* in my life (the day before) when i accompanied my girlfriend to her friend's home to feed her cat while she was away.
the officers didn't care what i had to say and they proceeded to play good-cop bad-cop and tell some enormous lies about me in the process. one of them asked if he could use my bathroom and then proceeded to case my home.
then they told me that they needed to take my picture and fingerprint all of my fingers. after about one hour they finally left.
after a few weeks had passed (in which i heard nothing from the police) i called the police department to find out what was going on. it took a couple weeks to get through the police bureaucracy, but eventually someone was able to tell me that i was no longer under suspicion.
when i expressed concern about having my picture and fingerprints taken and said i wanted them back i was told that wasn't possible. after expressing my displeasure and complaining to various people in the police department eventually my picture and fingerprints were released to me.
unfortunately, my friend who is a police officer told me that my picture and fingerprints had been scanned and sent to the national FBI database. when i asked him about having them removed from that database he gave me a look that indicated the possibility of that happening was as likely as a cold day in hell.
that experience taught me how easy it is to have your unique unchangeable biometric information stolen and forever stored in government databases just waiting to be abused.
Victim of Circumstance? (Score:4, Interesting)
DNA Evidence Is Ripe For Abuse (Score:3, Interesting)
I think there will be a notable case in the next couple of years where someone intentionally plants some subtle but very incriminating DNA evidence to incriminate someone else. Unfortunately, I think the police and the forensic investigators are buying the "infallible DNA" story as much as the juries. I think they would really like to find surprising DNA evidence to convict a judge, captain of industry, member of the clergy, etc.
Disclaimer: I've never watched the CSI television show.
Petition for Privacy (Score:3, Informative)
As a registered voter in the state of California (Oakland), I wish to express my concern regarding your DNA initiative. As such a policy will likely be emulated by other states in the future, I must request a strong system of checks and balances be implemented to protect citizens from potential abuse, as amending them after-the-fact will be difficult. It is important that such measures look far into the future when determining regulation.
I am aware that your proposed policy is, in part, to aid in the capture of criminals by scanning suspects in advance of a trial. I agree that this would be of great benefit in many cases. However, I must suggest that it is a violation to persons wrongfully arrested, as they will then have their DNA committed to file without cause. Even with provisions requiring that DNA samples for persons acquitted of wrong doing be destroyed, such a system has too great a potential for abuse.
My requests are simple and do not inhibit the usefulness of such a system:
1. DNA should only be taken from CONVICTED felons, rather than on arrest. This protects innocent citizens who are wrongfully arrested.
2. DNA samples must be expressly limited to criminal identification, without the possibility of use by other organizations (employers, insurance companies, etc). Also, future technologies and methods of identifying potentially violent or aggressive predisposition in suspects may also one day be abused in profiling, creating an unfair bias.
3. All DNA matches must be proven in a double-blind test by an independent party, to prevent corruption of evidence.
4. DNA samples should only be taken in relation to violent crime and other extraordinary circumstances. Felony charges for fraud, wire tampering, and other white collar crimes do not warrant DNA samples at present, regardless of their nature.
Thank you for your consideration,
Signature
***
I would encourage other Californians to send similar concerns to Mr. Harrington (please don't flame him).
Now, here's a thought.... (Score:3, Funny)
2. Gather stray hairs, saliva from glasses, or whatever other organic bits you can find and place in bag. Yes, gross, I know.
3. Commit a felony and scatter the contents of said bag.
4. Watch police arrest innocents.
Alternatively, replace items 1 and 2 above with:
1/2 Obtain samples from someone you have a grudge against... some blood would be really nice.
It's not easy to plant fingerprints at the scene of a crime. What are the chances that if this becomes standard crooks will be scattering DNA at crime scenes like confetti at a wedding.
Just remember what happened recently to the Oregon lawyer who was unlucky enough to have a fingerprint fairly close to that of terrorist suspect. A false positive match put him in prison for some weeks as a "material witness" and he was only released when Spanish police made a match to another person. There was no evidence against the guy, apart from the fingerprint.
I suspect it will be much worse with a false positive (or planted) DNA.
As someone who's been charged with a felony... (Score:3, Insightful)
Let me get this straight: (Score:3, Interesting)
Back up the boat, boys, the anchor's fallen off.
The US already has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with 701 prisoners per 100,000 citizens. The Russian Federation is a distant second place, with 584 per 100k. (Source: International Centre for Prison Studies [prisonstudies.org].) We're standing silently by, watching as our civil rights and protections are being stripped away at an alarming rate. The Fourth Amendment is being all but repealed... and some bozo lawyer in The People's Republic of California wants to make it still easier to put more of us behind bars?
There seems to be some flawed notion that law enforcement is failing in this country -- the fact is that the violent crime rate has been falling for several years. It's not because we have incarcerated so many, but simple demographics: The number of males in the more crime-prone age group has decreased.
Re:He who commits the crime... (Score:4, Interesting)
He who is merely arrested forfeits personal biometric identification (DNA) which is not at all like fingerprints, but carries very personal and private data about his genetic makeup, health, probability of disease and much else.
Remember, being arrested has nothing to do with being guilty. This means that if a couple little girls like the ones up in Seattle skip school and then make up a story about being raped by you or some other stranger that had never even seen the girls before and you're arrested because of it (or in that poor homeless guy's case, PUT IN PRISON), they will confiscate your DNA for evidence for eternity - even if the girls later confess that they invented the whole story to get away with skipping school (as those two little twats in Seattle did this past winter).
It isn't even so much the DNA itself as it is the shifting of our legal system from a "presumed innocent until proven guilty" to a "guilty until proven innocent, and even then you're still fucked" system.
Re:He who commits the crime... (Score:4, Interesting)
He who is merely arrested forfeits personal biometric identification (DNA) which is not at all like fingerprints, but carries very personal and private data about his genetic makeup, health, probability of disease and much else.
No, it is just like a fingerprint, except that it is compared by a computer and is not subject to the same fuzzy matching and "guesses" that happen with conventional fingerprints. Your DNA fingerprint is not a sequence of your genome. It does not reveal any private data about you except your gender (which would have been noted on your arrest form anyway.) It does not reveal anything about your health, it reveals nothing about what diseases you might get in the future, etc.
Here is a quick reality check for you: if it was so easy and cost effective to get your genetic testing done at the police crime lab, why is it that it costs the medical system thousands of dollars to do a test to see if you are suceptible to a single disease?
Re:Gathering DNA of offenders... (Score:2)