New Law that Includes DNA of Arrested Felony Suspects
Results in Matches to New and Old Criminal Investigations
Indianapolis – This week the Indiana State
Police Laboratory completed compilation of information for the Indiana
Legislature about SB322, which was passed in the 2017 legislative session and
became law on January 1, 2018. The change in the law resulted in the
expansion of samples that are entered into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS).
Prior to January 1, 2018, only DNA samples of convicted felons were entered
into CODIS. With the change in the law any person arrested for an alleged
felony offense has their DNA collected as part of the in-processing at a local
county jail. These DNA samples are then forwarded to the ISP Indianapolis
Regional Laboratory for analysis and subsequent entry into the CODIS database.
Now, with three months of data available since the inclusion of DNA samples from arrested persons, along with samples from convicted persons, the ISP Laboratory
Division has compiled information on matches, that are referred to as 'hits'.
January-March 2018 CODIS Data:
Total Offender Samples Received, inclusive of both convicted
offender and felony arrests: 12,705
-
Convicted Offender Samples: 3,330
o This
number reflects samples of persons arrested prior to January 1, 2018 that have
since been convicted of a felony offense through March 31, 2018
o While
it cannot be stated with absolute certainty, it is anticipated this number will
begin to decrease over future quarters as the number of cases of persons
arrested prior to January 1, 2018 continue to process through the judicial
system
-
Felony Arrest Samples: 9,375
o This
number reflects the number of samples submitted from persons arrested for
suspected felony offenses since January 1, 2018 through March 31, 2018
Total CODIS Hits: 244
-
46 hits attributed to the 3,330 new convicted
offender samples collected Jan. 1 to March 31, 2018
-
72 hits attributed to the 9,375 felony arrest
samples collected Jan. 1 to March 31
-
126 hits attributed to recently completed
unsolved crime scene samples
o Nine
of the 126 hits are case to case matches
§ Case
to case means separate criminal investigations that may involve the same
reporting police agency or different agencies
o The
other 117 of the 126 are new case profiles that match offenders previously
entered in CODIS
While the Indiana State Police is not able to share direct
case information for other police agencies, we are able to share some general
information from the first three months of 2018 data collection for CODIS:
-
The first arrestee hit was on January 14, 2018
and matched to an unsolved rape investigation that began in 2016
- All County jails facilities are providing
arrestee samples
- 44 different counties have been involved in hits
in the first quarter of 2018
-
CODIS has generated hits between Indiana and 23
other states during the first quarter of 2018
Maj. Steve Holland, commander of the Indiana State Police Laboratory Division commented, “We are very pleased with the results seen thus
far and are confident more and more crimes will be solved with the combination
of convicted and arrested persons samples being matched in the CODIS program.”
Holland continued, “None of this would have been possible without the enabling legislation, as well as the cooperation of all the county jail personnel who collect the DNA samples and
the diligent efforts of state police laboratory scientists that are processing
these samples for input into CODIS.”
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