{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"CD158: Rapid DNA Act","description":"Since 1994, the FBI has maintained a database with samples of DNA taken from convicted criminals in order to match those samples with DNA collected at crime scenes. However, over the course of the last two decades, the DNA database has expanded to include many more people. In this episode, we explore the expansion of DNA collection and storage by law enforcement and examine a new law that will further that trend. Later in the episode, get an update on Congress\u2019s progress in meeting their multiple September 30th deadlines.  Please support Congressional Dish:  Click here to contribute using credit card, debit card, PayPal, or Bitcoin Click here to support Congressional Dish for each episode via Patreon Mail Contributions to: 5753 Hwy 85 North #4576 Crestview, FL 32536  Thank you for supporting truly independent media!  Recommended Congressional Dish Episodes   CD098: USA Freedom Act: Privatization of the Patriot Act CD128: Crisis in Puerto Rico CD147: Controlling Puerto Rico  CD152: Air Traffic Control Privatization   Bills Outline H.R. 510: Rapid DNA Act of 2017   Orders the FBI Director to create standards and procedures for the use of Rapid DNA machines and the DNA analyses they create.  Expands the DNA samples allowed to be stored to include those prepared by any criminal justice agency using Rapid DNA machines that are approved by the FBI.   H.R. 601: Continuing Appropriations Act, 2018 and Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017 Division A: Reinforcing Education Accountability in Development Act   Official U.S. policy is now to partner with developing countries and &quot;donors, multilateral institutions, the private sector, and nongovernmental and civil society organizations, including faith-based organizations&quot; to promote education programs and activities to prepare individuals to be &quot;productive members of society and the workforce&quot;  &quot;Assistance provided under this section to support programs and activities under this subsection shall be aligned with and advance United States foreign policy and economic interests.&quot;    Division B: Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017   Appropriates $7.4 billion for disaster relief, as long as President Trump officially approves it.  Authorizes the Small Business Administration to lend $450 million for disaster rebuilding but half of that is allowed to be for administrative expenses  Appropriates and additional $7.4 billion for housing and infrastructure in disaster zones  Includes a provision that says the recipients of funds &quot;may adopt, without review or public comment, any environmental review, approval, or permit performed by a Federal agency, and such adoption shall satisfy the responsibilities of the recipient with respect to such environmental review, approval or permit.&quot;    Division C: Temporary Extension of Public Debt Relief   Suspends the debt ceiling until December 8, 2017.  Division D: Continuing Appropriations Act, 2018   Extends and  cuts by .6791% the funding and provisions from the 2017 funding law until  December 8, 2017.  The .6791% cut will  not apply to War on Terror funding     Additional Reading  Article:  How the Graham-Cassidy bill compares with past Republican health care repeal efforts by Meridith McGraw and Maryalice Parks, ABC News, September 20, 2017. Article:  GOP lawmaker urges colleagues to support short-term aviation bill by Melanie Zanona, The Hill, September 20, 2017. Commentary:  Graham-Cassidy Is the Worst Obamacare Repeal Bill Yet by Thomas Huelskoetter, Fortune, September 20, 2017. Article:  Hatch leads bipartisan CHIP reauthorization bill to continue children\u2019s health coverage, Ripon Advance News Service, September 20, 2017. Transcript:  Why The Government Sells Flood Insurance, NPR, September 16, 2017. Article:  Congress May Need to Throw a Lifeline to Flood Insurance Program by Greg Tourial, Roll Call, September 15, 2017. Article:  Congress just crossed three big things off its to-do list by Amber Phillips and Kim Soffen, The Washington Post, September 8, 2017. Article:  Trump sides with Democrats on fiscal issues, throwing Republican plans into chaos by Mike DeBonis, Kelsey Snell, Philip Rucker and Elise Viebeck, The Washington Post, September 7, 2017. Article:  Law enforcement can now scan your DNA in 90 minutes, but should they? by Annie Sciacca, Mercury News, August 25, 2017. Press Release: IntegenX Applauds the Passage of the Rapid DNA Act of 2017, IntegenX, August 21, 2017. Article:  Despite Privacy Concerns, Miami Beach Police Testing &quot;Rapid DNA&quot; Scans on Suspects by Jerry Iannelli, Miami New Times, August 16, 2017. Transcript:  Wray Confirmed as FBI Director as Questions Swirl over His Past Record &amp;amp; Close Ties to Big Business, Democracy Now, August 2, 2017. Article: Congress should consider taking another look at Christopher Wray, President Trump's pick to head up the FBI by James S. Henry, The American Interest, July 28, 2017. Article:  NetBio Announces its DNAscan System is the First and Only Rapid DNA Product to Earn NDIS Approval from the FBI, Business Wire, April 7, 2016. Article:  The Trouble Rising of Rapid DNA Testing by Ava Kofman, New Republic, February 24, 2016. Article:  The FBI Is Very Excited About This Machine That Can Scan Your DNA in 90 Minutes by Shane Bauer, Mother Jones, November 20, 2014. Article:  Supreme Court upholds Maryland law, says police may take DNA samples from arrestees by Robert Barnes, The Washington Post, June 3, 2013. Press Release:  Life Technologies Offers New Rapid DNA Platform, Cision PR Newswire, April 1, 2013. Article:  Life Tech to distribute rapid DNA tester by Bradley J. Fikes, San Diego Union Tribune, April 1, 2013. Article: Rapid DNA: Coming Soon to a Police Department or Immigration Office Near You by Jennifer Lynch, Eff, January 6, 2013. Audit Report: Combined DNA Index System Operational and Laboratory Vulnerabilities, Office of the Inspector General, May 2006.   References  Cornell Law School: Maryland v. King Cornell Law School: \u00a7 28.12 Collection of DNA samples Electronic Privacy Information Center: Maryland v. King - Concerning the Constitutionality of Mandatory DNA Collection Pre-Conviction GovTrack: H.R. 601: Continuing Appropriations Act, 2018 and Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017 GovTrack: H.R. 510: Rapid DNA Act of 2017 FBI:  FAQ on Rapid DNA Analysis FBI:  FAQ on CODIS and NDIS FBI: Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) EFF: DNA Collection Federal Register:  Regulations Under the DNA Analysis Backlog Elimination Act of 2000 NCSL:  DNA Arrestee Laws OpenSecrets: Clients lobbying on H.R.320: Rapid DNA Act of 2015 OpenSecrets: Clients lobbying on S.2348: Rapid DNA Act of 2016 OpenSecrets: Clients lobbying on H.R.510: Rapid DNA Act of 2017 OpenSecrets:  IntegenX: Bills lobbied, 2015 OpenSecrets:  IntegenX: Bills lobbied, 2016 OpenSecrets:  IntegenX: Bills lobbied, 2017 Integenx: RapidHIT System YouTube: Watch Demo of Rapid DNA Analysis Machine YouTube: Forensic DNA Mixups | Greg Hampikian | TEDxBoise YouTube: How is DNA fingerprinting used to identify a criminal? YouTube: Jimmy Kimmel on Bill Cassidy\u2019s Health \u201cCare\u201d Bill YouTube: Jimmy Kimmel Fights Back Against Bill Cassidy, Lindsey Graham &amp;amp; Chris Christie Listener Dee Bradley's Blog: World Political History   Sound Clip Sources Hearing:  Federal Bureau of Investigation Oversight, Senate Judiciary Committee, December 9, 2015. Witness: James Comey - Director, FBI Timestamps &amp;amp; Transcripts  5:07:58 Sen. Orrin Hatch (UT): Last week I introduced bipartisan legislation with Senators Feinstein, Lee, and Gillibrand to update our nation\u2019s laws to take account of this exciting new technology. Now, Rapid DNA devices\u2014they\u2019re self-contained, they\u2019re fully automated instruments that can be placed in booking stations, and they can both develop a DNA profile from a cheek swab and compare the results against existing profiles in less than two hours. Now, my bill, the Rapid DNA Act of 2015, would allow law enforcement officials using FBI-approved Rapid DNA instruments to upload profiles generated by such devices to the FBI's Combined DNA Index System and perform database comparisons. Director Comey, you've spoken in the past about Rapid DNA and how this technology will help law enforcement. Do you believe that Rapid DNA technology is important, how will it impact law enforcement, and do you believe Congress should pass legislation authorizing its use within standards and guidelines promulgated by your agency? Director James Comey: Yeah, that authority that's in your bill would help us change the world in a very, very exciting way, that allow us, in booking stations around the country, if someone's arrested, to know instantly, or near instantly, whether that person is the rapist who's been on the loose in a particular community before they're released on bail and get away, or to clear somebody, to show that they're not the person. It's very, very exciting. We are very grateful that we're going to have the statutory authorization if that passes to connect those Rapid DNA technologies to the national DNA database. Hatch: Well, thank you. My bill, the Rapid DNA Act, will not affect when or under what circumstances law enforcement collects DNA samples. These decisions would be governed by state or other federal law. What it will do is affect where samples are processed and how quickly they're processed. Now, Mr. Director, what would you say to individuals who may be concerned that Rapid DNA technology will raise privacy concerns, and what would you say to individuals who may be concerned that this technology could affect the integrity of FBI's Combined DNA Index System, or CODIS? And I would note that my bill restricts access to CODIS to FBI-approved Rapid DNA instruments operated in accordance with FBI-issued standards and procedures. Comey: The first\u2014you said it well, Senator: folks need to understand this isn't about collecting DNA from more people. It's about the DNA that's collected when someone is arrested, being able to be analyzed much more quickly, that can show us in some cases this is the wrong person or can show us in some cases this is someone we have to be very worried about. That is good for our justice system as a whole. And you're exactly right. The national database, the CODIS database, is the gold standard. This legislation does not make it any\u2014water down the standards that are applied before a DNA result can be pressed against that database. We're still going to have high standards. We're still going to require that this is the gold standard for identification in the United States.  Hearing:  H.R. 320, the \u201cRapid DNA Act\u201d, House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations, June 18, 2015.   PDF Version  Witnesses:  Amy Hess - Executive Director of Science &amp;amp; Technology at the FBI Jody Wolf - President of the American Society of Criminal Laboratory Directors Natasha Alexenko - Founder of Natasha\u2019s Justice Project  Timestamps &amp;amp; Transcripts  6:05 Amy Hess: All 50 states, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Army\u2019s Criminal Investigation Laboratory, and the FBI contribute DNA records to and participate in NDIS, which contains almost 14 million offender or arrestee DNA records and over 630,000 forensic or crime scene DNA records. 11:06 Jody Wolf: Currently, these devices are best suited for use with single-source, high-quantity biological samples such as referenced standards of blood or saliva from known individuals, thus limiting its usefulness for complex crime scene samples of more than one person. These instruments also currently can\u2019t analyze trace amounts of DNA. Consequently, these instruments are not designed for the routine testing of evidence types found in rape kits and will not help with the reduction of rape kit backlogs. 22:03 Rep. Bob Goodlatte (VA): Would this legislation help speed this up a lot? Jody Wolf: Well, comparing 90 samples utilizing Rapid DNA would take almost 27 hours. Using the\u2014processing it using a traditional existing technology would take 7 to 8 hours. So the limitation with the Rapid DNA is that you can only run 5 samples at a time, whereas on current technology, we can run 24 samples at a time. To process 90 samples utilizing Rapid would take 27 hours. Using existing technology would take 7 to 8. Same result. Goodlatte: So do you think that this is a good thing for people to have the option here, or not? Wolf: It depends on your goal. The advantage that Rapid DNA has is that you have that answer while the person is still in the booking station. With traditional databasing, there\u2019s a delay because you have to transport the sample from point of collection to a laboratory for analysis.  Supreme Court Argument: Maryland v. King, February 26, 2013.   Audio Part 1  Audio Part 2  Witnesses  Katherine Winfree - Chief Deputy Attorney General of Baltimore, MD Michael Dreeben - Deputy Solicitor General of the Department of Justice  Timestamps &amp;amp; Transcripts Part 1  3:24 Katherine Winfree: The cornerstone of our argument is that when an individual is taken into custody, an individual is arrested on a probable cause\u2014a probable-cause arrest\u2014that person, by virtue of being in that class of individuals whose conduct has led the police to arrest him on\u2014based on probable cause, surrenders a substantial amount of liberty and privacy. Justice Elena Kagan: But, Ms. Winfree, that can\u2019t be quite right, can it? I mean, such a person\u2014assume you\u2019ve been arrested for something, the state doesn\u2019t have the right to go search your house for evidence of unrelated crimes. Unknown Speaker: Justice Kagan. Kagan: Isn\u2019t that correct? Winfree: That\u2019s correct, Justice Kagan. Kagan: Doesn\u2019t have the right to go search your car for evidence of unrelated crimes. Winfree: That\u2019s correct. Kagan: Just because you\u2019ve been arrested doesn\u2019t mean that you lose the privacy expectations and things you have that aren\u2019t related to the offense that you\u2019ve been arrested for. Winfree: That\u2019s correct, but what we\u2019re seizing here is not evidence of crime. What it is, is information related to that person\u2019s DNA profile. Those 26 numbers\u2014 Kagan: Well\u2014and if there were a real identification purpose for this, then I understand that argument. But if it\u2019s just to solve cold cases, which is the way you started, then it\u2019s just like searching your house to see what\u2019s in your house that could help to solve a cold case. Winfree: Well, I would say there\u2019s a very real distinction between the police generally rummaging in your home to look for evidence that might relate to your personal papers and your thoughts. It\u2019s a very real difference there than swabbing the inside of an arrestee\u2019s cheek to determine what that person\u2019s CODIS DNA profile is. It\u2019s looking only at 26 numbers that tell us nothing more about that individual. Kagan: Well, but, if that\u2019s what you\u2019re basing it on, then you\u2019re not basing it on an arrestee. I mean, then the chief justice is right: it could be any arrestee, no matter how minor the offense. It could be just any old person in the street. Why don\u2019t we do this for everybody who comes in for a driver\u2019s license because it\u2019s very effective?  Part 2  0:20 Katherine Winfree: Since 2009, when Maryland began to collect DNA samples from arrestees charged with violent crimes and burglary, there have been 225 matches, 75 prosecutions, and 42 convictions, including that of Respondent King. Justice Antonin Scalia: Well, that\u2019s really good. I\u2019ll bet you, if you conducted a lot of unreasonable searches and seizures, you\u2019d get more convictions, too. That proves absolutely nothing.  Press Briefing: DNA Use in Law Enforcement, Attorney General Ashcroft, March 4, 2002. Timestamps &amp;amp; Transcripts  0:33 Attorney General John Ashcroft: Douglas and Laura White were married just 11 days when, walking down a bike path in Mesquite, Texas, in November of 1993, a man jumped out from behind the trees and demanded their money. The frightened couple began to pray, which enraged their attacker. He shot Douglas dead on the scene, raped Laura, and disappeared into the Dallas suburb. Eight years later, in January of 2001, under the federal DNA Backlog Reduction Program, police in Dallas matched a DNA sample taken from Alvin Avon Braziel Jr., with DNA evidence collected from the crime scene. Braziel was convicted of capital murder and given the death sentence. The murder conviction of Alvin Brazil is a powerful example of how one technology, forensic DNA analysis, has revolutionized law enforcement. Over the short span of 10 years, DNA technology has proven itself to be the truth machine of law enforcement, ensuring justice by identifying the guilty and exonerating the innocent. With a strong support of Congress, the Department of Justice has served as a leader in the national effort to maximize the benefits of DNA evidence, and the past 5 years have seen a national explosion in forensic DNA collection. All 50 states and the federal government now have laws on the books that require DNA to be collected from convicted offenders for the purpose of criminal DNA databasing. The strong trend is toward broader DNA sample collection, including collection from all felons in many states. And the reason is simple: experience has taught law enforcement that the more offenders that are included in the database, the more crimes will be solved. 9:23 Attorney General John Ashcroft: The law enforcement tool that makes this DNA analysis useful to state and local police and prosecutors throughout the nation is the Combined DNA Index System, known as CODIS. It\u2019s administered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. CODIS brings the power of DNA technology to bear on thousands of law enforcement investigations by integrating information obtained by state DNA databases and making that information available nationwide.  House Debate:  DNA House Floor Debate, May 16, 2017. Timestamps &amp;amp; Transcripts  8:00 Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner: Like fingerprinting, photographing, and other booking procedures which at the time were novel but now have become routine, Rapid DNA will soon be standard procedure in police stations throughout the country. There is only one problem with Rapid DNA technology: federal law. Our law, written in 1994 when DNA technology was still in its infancy, prohibits the use of Rapid DNA technology in booking stations. This is not because of any limitation in Rapid DNA technology, but simply because at that time Rapid DNA technology was not even contemplated.   Music Presented in This Episode  Intro &amp;amp; Exit:  Tired of Being Lied To by David Ippolito (found on Music Alley by mevio)   Cover Art Design by Only Child Imaginations  ","author_name":"Congressional Dish","author_url":"https:\/\/congressionaldish.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/5767642\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/393ba9\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/17205208"}