Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples - Printable Version +- Sinisterly (https://sinister.ly) +-- Forum: General (https://sinister.ly/Forum-General) +--- Forum: World News (https://sinister.ly/Forum-World-News) +--- Thread: Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples (/Thread-Police-Retaining-Mishandling-DNA-Samples) |
Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples - Dismas - 02-22-2022 There have been cases of police, in San Francisco and elsewhere, mishandling DNA. In some cases this resulted in unrelated or false convictions. Quote:This week we learned that San Francisco Police used a woman’s own DNA—collected years earlier as part of an investigation into her sexual assault—to charge her for an unrelated property crime. What’s worse—it appears the S.F. police routinely search victims’ DNA in criminal investigations. Read More: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/02/not-just-san-francisco-police-across-country-are-retaining-and-searching-dna RE: Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples - Geofront - 02-24-2022 Man, I think only unprefossional people admit this sort of mistakes RE: Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples - Boudica - 02-24-2022 (02-24-2022, 01:59 PM)Geofront Wrote: Man, I think only unprefossional people admit this sort of mistakes Oddly, I'd argue the exact opposite. I think transparency is much more professional than secrecy and cover ups. It sounds like the issue was moreso related to how the data is stored, than the actual evidence itself. I've actually also heard a crazy story whereby the same woman's DNA was picked up for multiple crimes all over the US (I think). Turns out it was someone's DNA from a place where the cotton swabs were manufactured. They found the cotton swabs used for DNA testing were contaminated at the point of manufacturing. How bizarre! On the note of police access to DNA - I'll be truthful, I expected DNA & fingerprinting to be available to any relevant part of a government system the moment it's recorded by any of their entities. E.g., I'd expect border recordings of my fingerprints to also be on record alongside any DNA if I were tested by police for anything. I would assume that any part of the criminal justice system would be able to access that DNA when running DNA matches for any open case. In theory, it's very useful to have that quantity of data to narrow down a case. Naturally the concern is the repercussions when this goes wrong. However, I'd argue this is an incredible rarity. RE: Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples - Geofront - 02-25-2022 you might be right, but I still have another opinion RE: Police Retaining/Mishandling DNA Samples - elwoodb - 02-28-2022 Storing victim's DNA and using it to catch them doing something illegal? sure why not |