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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Court Affirms Law That All Federal Felons Provide DNA for U.S. Database
Title:US: Court Affirms Law That All Federal Felons Provide DNA for U.S. Database
Published On:2007-11-30
Source:San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-16 11:55:12
COURT AFFIRMS LAW THAT ALL FEDERAL FELONS PROVIDE DNA FOR U.S. DATABASE

A divided federal appeals court on Thursday upheld a law requiring
all convicted federal felons to provide DNA samples for a database
available to any police agency in the nation.

The law, passed by Congress in 2004, expanded a previous statute in
2000 that covered only prisoners and parolees who had been convicted
of violent crimes in federal court. In a 2-1 ruling, the Ninth U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said requiring DNA from all
felons would aid law enforcement agencies without intruding seriously
into the privacy of drug offenders and other nonviolent criminals.

"While DNA evidence is often central to the investigation of violent
crimes such as murder or sexual assault ... it can be useful in
solving nonviolent crimes as well," said Judge Margaret McKeown in
the majority opinion. The case involved a Washington state man,
Thomas Kriesel, who challenged an order to provide a DNA sample after
serving 2 1/2 years in federal prison for a methamphetamine conviction.

Although nonviolent criminals are less likely than violent offenders
to commit new crimes after their release, they still have significant
rates of recidivism, McKeown said, quoting a U.S. Sentencing Commission report.

She also said the privacy rights of a convict who is on supervised
release - the post-imprisonment system for former federal inmates,
similar to parole supervision in state laws - are less than those of
noncriminals. The law protects privacy by making it a crime to
knowingly disclose information on the database to anyone outside law
enforcement, McKeown said.

McKeown said the 2004 law has been upheld by the seven other federal
appeals courts that have considered it, but Judge Betty Fletcher, in
a dissenting opinion, said the government has failed to justify the
expansion of the law to nonviolent felons.

Drug offenders like Kriesel have relatively low recidivism rates,
Fletcher said, and federal officials did not explain how DNA
profiling would solve such crimes. She noted that the government
preserves the samples indefinitely, even after a convict's supervised
release ends.

"An ever-expanding and unerasable electronic index of DNA profiles,
monitored by the government's unblinking digital eye, may no doubt
prove to be an effective law-enforcement tool," Fletcher said. "But
our compact with the government requires constitutional means, not
just effective ends."

Kriesel's lawyer, Colin Fieman of the federal public defender's
office, told the Associated Press he was encouraged by Fletcher's
dissent and will ask the full appeals court for a new hearing.
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