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News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: GBI Crime Lab Backlog Delays Law Enforcement Efforts
Title:US GA: GBI Crime Lab Backlog Delays Law Enforcement Efforts
Published On:2004-09-08
Source:Macon Telegraph (GA)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 00:44:24
GBI CRIME LAB BACKLOG DELAYS LAW ENFORCEMENT EFFORTS

backlog of cases at GBI crime labs are causing delays for Georgia law
enforcement agencies, and in some cases authorities are waiting more than
six months for tests on drug samples.

"Public safety has taken a big cut, just like everybody else, and it's
having an adverse impact," Monroe County Sheriff J.C. Bittick said.

The GBI does the majority of forensic work for Georgia's public safety
agencies, providing, among other things, toxicology reports and tests on DNA
and drug samples. But during the past year, the backlog in GBI labs has
almost tripled.

From July 2003 to July 2004, the backlog increased from 10,740 to 28,570
cases, according to the GBI. The delays have held up court proceedings and
even let drug dealers back on the street, Bittick and others say.

Forty-five cases out of 250 that went before a grand jury in Monroe County
in August were continued because of lab delays.

"It backs up the whole system," Bittick said. "They've got cases over here
waiting to be tried when more cases are coming in."

Handwriting analysis is so slow, his office no longer uses it, he said. But
the delays affect not just law enforcement, but also people waiting for
toxicology reports for insurance settlements in the deaths of their loved
ones, Bittick said.

This is not the first time there's been a backlog. In the late 1990s, it was
close to 30,000 before the GBI's budget was increased, said Dan Kirk, deputy
director of the GBI's division of forensic science.

However, from fiscal 2000 to fiscal 2005, the forensic division's budget has
decreased by 15 percent because of state budget cuts. And as the budget has
dwindled, positions have gone unfilled, although Gov. Sonny Perdue amended
the 2005 budget to add money for 15 positions.

Those employees will take a year to train when hired, Kirk said. Even with
those positions filled, 30 of the division's 280 positions will remain open,
he said.

State Rep. Curtis Jenkins, D-Forsyth, said that the House Public Safety
Committee plans to meet this fall and discuss the GBI's budget.

"I don't know what we'll be able to do," he said. "It depends on what
revenue there is."

He said his understanding is that the budget has been cut across the board,
and that includes the GBI.

"The problem with that is some departments have what might be considered
more critical roles than others, and law enforcement is one of those
critical roles," Jenkins said.

Even if the labs got no more cases, it would take six or seven months to
catch up on the current backlog, Kirk said. Although the lengths of delays
vary from lab to lab, the biggest backlog is at the Atlanta lab.

Requests to speed up certain cases have been met, Kirk said, but law
enforcement agencies are still not getting results as fast they would like.

"Will they ever? I don't know if there's an answer to that," he said.

Kirk said he'd like to see all results out in 30 days, something the labs
are able to do 40 percent of the time. Bittick said 60 days is acceptable.

To help cut back on the workload, the GBI stopped testing marijuana in July,
something the GBI trains other law enforcement agencies to do, Kirk said.

The crime lab in Macon currently has nine employees, compared with the 14 it
had in 1999, said Shawn Davis, manager of Macon's GBI crime lab. There are
three fewer scientists testing drug samples and none doing toxicology, Davis
said.

Richard Milam, district attorney of the Towaliga Circuit, which includes
Monroe County, said the delays have put some drug dealers back on the
street.

State law requires that bond be set if a defendant doesn't go before a grand
jury within 90 days of being charged, Milam said. But since the verification
of evidence takes more than 90 days, bond is being set and defendants are
being released.

"We're having a situation where they're re-offending while out on bond," he
said. "It's standard now, when they get in trouble, they need money to get
out of trouble."

Kim Schwartz, an assistant district attorney in Bibb County, said there have
been other problems with getting lab results. During the last few years, the
GBI began only testing one sample per case, she said. So, if the lab
receives green leafy substance, pills and a white substance, they'll only
test the white substance, which is likely to be cocaine or methamphetamine -
substances that carry a more severe penalty.

"If they don't test all three substances, we can't prosecute all three
(charges)," she said. "That's a problem, if you want maximum penalties for
your bad guys, which we do."

She said she hopes the GBI's decision to stop testing marijuana changes
things. Last week, she was surprised when she received test results on
evidence submitted only two weeks before.

"I'm cautiously optimistic and encouraged by this," she said.
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