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April 24, 2005
New Article Spotlight: Abandoned DNA
CrimProf Elizabeth Joh of Davis has posted Reclaiming 'Abandoned' DNA: The Fourth Amendment and Genetic Privacy on SSRN. The article will be published in 2006 in the Northwestern Law Review. Here's the abstract:
We leave traces - skin, saliva, hair,
and blood - of our genetic identity nearly everywhere we go. Should the
police be permitted, without restriction, to target us and to collect
the DNA that we leave behind? In a growing number of instances, the
police, unburdened by criminal procedure rules, seek this "abandoned
DNA" from criminal suspects in hopes of resolving otherwise unsolvable
cases. Abandoned DNA is any amount of human tissue capable of DNA
analysis and separated from an individual's person inadvertently or
involuntarily, but not by police coercion. What are the consequences of
allowing this investigative method to remain unregulated? In stark
distinction to the growing body of commentary on the collection of DNA
samples for state and federal DNA databases, little attention has been
paid to this backdoor method of DNA collection.
Deciding
whether DNA might ever be "abandoned" is important, because abandoned
DNA provides the means to collect genetic information from anyone, at
any time. Criminal procedure law poses no restrictions on this kind of
evidence collection by the police. Not only does the label of
abandonment affect police behavior, it also raises basic questions
about the changing nature of legal identity. How should we characterize
the relationships between our physical bodies and our identities, now
that nearly any "body particle" can reveal our genetic information? The
final part of this Essay proposes first steps towards addressing the
problem, but its primary task is to show the need to reframe the debate
over covert involuntary DNA sampling and to make the case for "genetic
exceptionalism."
To obtain the paper, click here. [Mark Godsey]
April 24, 2005 in Scholarship | Permalink
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