Archive for August, 2010

 

DNA Laws are being passed everywhere but here!

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Many of you may have caught Carte Blanche last night where I was interviewed on behalf of The DNA Project (click here if you missed the Carte Blanche interview). The overwhelming message was that we urgently need to pass DNA legislation in SA in order to utilize our DNA Database in such a way that it provides criminal intelligence. DNA is the gold standard for criminal investigation throughout the world and yet here in SA, where it is needed the most, we are being held to ransom by the members of Parliament who have yet to resume deliberations on the DNA Bill.

Why? Why are our Parliamentarians so slow on the uptake to implement laws to regulate this amazing technology which we have at our disposal?

The first phase of the DNA Bill which dealt with fingerprints was adopted in March 2010 – it is now August 2010 and we have not heard a word from the Portfolio Committee as to when they will be returning to Parliament to consider Phase Two – DNA. The World Cup is over, and everyone else seems to have gone back to ‘business as usual’, but every inquiry I make as to the whereabouts of the people who are supposed to be looking at this bill, are met with a blank stare or worse yet, “I don’t know”. This is unacceptable. But what can we do about it? We can speak up! That’s what.

Have a look at the following link: http://www2.wnct.com/news/2010/jul/15/13/dna-sample-testing-system-expanded-new-nc-law-ar-300849/

Don’t you wish we had more politicians who acted like the Governor of North Carolina in the USA, Bev Perdue? How many of our politicians have been effected by a violent crime just like she was? But what are they doing about it?

Perdue calls DNA testing the 21st-century fingerprint and she believes it will help prevent violent crime across her state. “In many, many cases DNA becomes the difference maker,” says Governor Bev Perdue. Starting in February, police across North Carolina will take DNA samples from anyone charged with murder, rape, or other violent felony crimes. The General Assembly passed the bill in July 2010.  Officers say it will prevent crime and solve cold cases. “It also helps us exonerate the innocent because it is so precise,” said Roy Cooper, North Carolina Attorney General.

Perdue says DNA samples will keep repeat offenders off the streets, preventing crimes like the murder of her dear friend Kathy Taft.

“This became personal to me especially because one of my 30-year best friends was murdered during the spring,” said Perdue. DNA testing was used to bring Taft’s murderer to justice in May this year.

The North Carolina State law enforcement has solved nearly 1,400 crimes using the existing DNA database.  Now with earlier testing, they’re looking to solve even more.

And I love this message from Perdue for lawmakers who still call DNA testing unreasonable search and seizure. “We have 21st century science and technology that allows us to catch really bad people faster and it is really unreasonable for the elected leaders and all of us to not move forward to make our streets as safe as we can,” she said. Hear! Hear! (wish you were here!)

Attorney General Roy Cooper says the law has privacy safe guards.  It’s a felony to misuse DNA and law officers will delete DNA records from the state’s database if the person is acquitted or their charges are dismissed. In addition, Law enforcement from the local level to the SBI will now of course have new responsibilities and they’ll undergo training on how to use the swabbing kits for collecting DNA.

Now, how difficult could that be to implement in SA? What exactly is preventing us from writing a story like the one above?

Vanessa

ps. since writing this blog, one of the portfolio committee members tasked with reviewing the bill has responded to my email requesting further information on the lack of progress of the bill – see the below commentary to follow what has transpired to date. I will continue to post the responses as I receive them. V.

Carte Blanche features Vanessa Lynch talking about DNA Legislation

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

DNA
Date: 22 August 2010 07:00
Producer: Eugene Botha
Presenter: Chantal Rutter
Show: Carte Blanche
To watch the show on-line click here for part one and click here for part two of the story.

1979: A grim scene in a Los Angeles suburb. An elderly woman is found dead on the floor of her kitchen. There’s evidence that she was also sexually assaulted.

David Doan (Deputy Chief: LAPD): ‘There were a number of leads on that case. There was even a possible suspect – a neighbour – but there was not enough evidence to establish that he committed the crime.’

But the case went cold, says David Doan, Deputy Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department.

David: ‘What we refer to as ‘cold cases’ means a case where the trail has gone cold on leads… there are no further leads.’

All the evidence, including clothing stained with semen, was put into storage. But the case was not forgotten.

David: ‘Here in the Los Angeles Police Department we never close our homicide cases, we always consider them open.’

In 2003, 18 years after the murder, DNA profiling had become a useful tool in solving crimes.

Cold case detectives re-investigated the case. They sent the victim’s clothing for analysis and obtained a DNA profile of the murderer.

This unknown profile was then entered into their DNA database system, known as CODIS.

David: ‘In 2009 an individual was stopped for driving a stolen vehicle. His DNA was taken and we received what we refer to as a ‘cold case match’. He happened to be 17 years old at the time when he committed the crime and he was 51 years old when we identified him as the suspect in the case – another example of an individual who would not have been held accountable for the murder of this elderly woman if it had not been for a DNA database.’

And, all over the world, DNA profiling and DNA databases have become major tools in crime fighting.

David: ‘I cannot imagine doing police work today without DNA no more than I would be comfortable today seeing police work without fingerprints and photographs.’

One would think that using DNA in this way would be standard practice wherever profiling is available. But it’s not.

The LA murderer would never have been caught in South Africa, and not because of backlogs.

There’s another reason.

Vanessa Lynch (Director: DNA Project): ‘Where we fall short is that we’re not progressing with our legislation as we should.’

Vanessa Lynch is Director of the DNA Project, and promotes the use of a DNA as a crime fighting tool. She says the SAPS’s DNA profiling capabilities are excellent.

Vanessa: ‘The quality of the processing, the DNA analysis that is coming out of our laboratories, is in fact superior.’

Although we’ve often reported on the massive backlogs in processing forensic evidence by both the police and the Health Department, the DNA profiling unit at the Police Science Laboratory is apparently world-class and delays are minimal.

Vanessa says the problem is that current legislation is outdated and prevents the full use of DNA to solve crimes. New forensic legislation has already been sitting before a parliamentary committee for more than two years.

Vanessa: ‘But what they did was they split it between fingerprints and DNA. Initially it dealt with both. The committee has just passed Phase 1 of the bill, which is fingerprint, and now it has been passed through the national assembly and various areas of parliament. They will then look at Phase 2. They have decided, however, that they want to go on an overseas tour to both the UK and Canada to look at how other systems operate.’

While our legislators are battling, other countries have addressed many of the problems pertaining to forensic DNA profiling.

To understand the issues involved, one first has to understand what forensic DNA profiling entails.

Colonel Luhein Frazenburg of the SAPS’s Forensic Science Laboratory in Pretoria explains.

Col Luhein Frazenburg (Commanders: DNA Case Work): ‘Basically what we do here is we do all DNA analysis for all DNA cases in South Africa. Blood samples, semen samples, saliva, any human tissue is tested here.’

Chantal Rutter (Carte Blanche presenter): ‘Colonel, what is DNA?’

Col Frazenburg: ‘DNA stands for Deoxyribonucleic Acid. It is a molecule that’s present in all living cells. It’s the genetic blueprint of a person. Now basically half of your DNA you get from your mother and half of your DNA you get from your father. Also, your DNA does not differ over your lifespan and all your DNA is the same whether you look at your hair samples, your blood samples, bone, or tissue samples.’

Luhein showed us around the state-of-the-art forensic science laboratory.

Chantal: ‘This is something really special. It’s one-of-a-kind and it is right here at the police forensic laboratory in Pretoria.’

It’s the only fully automated DNA profiling system in the world and was developed right here in South Africa. It can process 800 samples a week. And it’s in part thanks to this machine that there are no DNA profiling backlogs in Pretoria and only a few in the Cape.

DNA profiling entails extracting and analysing a DNA strand from a human cell.

Vanessa: ’95% of your DNA, they in fact don’t know what it codes for. About 5% of your DNA they know you have blue eyes or two legs… two arms, etc. But the 95% which they call ‘junk DNA’ or ‘non-coded DNA’ in fact doesn’t code for anything that they understand.’

There are millions of these pieces of non-specific DNA.

Vanessa: ‘They only take nine numbers out of those millions of markers of your non-coded DNA and that’s all they need to identify you as an individual.’

Each of these nine selected areas on the DNA strand contains contributions by one’s parents. They can be expressed by a pair of numbers. So, in effect, your forensic DNA profile consists of a list of nine pairs of numbers.

The chance of two people having the same numbers in the nine pairs is one in 79 trillion. In the US, they use 13 pairs of numbers for a forensic profile.

Vanessa says that the lack of proper DNA legislation in South Africa prevents the police from fully utilising this invaluable identification tool to solve crimes.

For example, current laws don’t allow for DNA evidence obtained at all crime scenes to be processed.

Vanessa: ‘If you collect DNA evidence from a crime scene, but you don’t have suspect, they won’t process that DNA profile.’

Furthermore, our outdated legislation prevents the police and other law enforcement officers from taking DNA samples from suspects.

Vanessa: ‘A DNA sample currently is taken by way of a syringe by a medical practitioner. This is by virtue of an old 1977 act which was promulgated long before the advent of DNA profiling.’

And, under current legislation, the right of an individual to privacy is perhaps the main issue. Taking a DNA sample and preserving it on a database is seen as an invasion of privacy.

So unless DNA was involved in convicting them, the DNA profiles aren’t taken from convicted murderers, or rapists already serving time. Vanessa thinks privacy fears are unfounded.
Vanessa: ‘Even if somebody, for instance, got hold of the DNA database and looked at those sequence of numbers, there is nothing they can do with them. They cannot read any genetic disposition, whether physical or medical, from those sequence of numbers. And that is why throughout the world it has never been challenged constitutionally. It does not represent an invasion of privacy and we need to understand this in South Africa.’

So maybe another overseas trip for parliamentarians is not such a bad idea after all.

Vanessa: ‘Perhaps they’ll realise when going there, not only that it is successful in terms of crime resolution, crime investigation, and ultimately crime prevention, but also that all the issues that they are concerned about have legitimately been addressed by virtue of legislation that has been passed that shows that it is not an invasion of rights and that it is okay for a police officer to take a swab from you in order to take a DNA sample.’

David: ‘I think we need to find a compromise between a right to privacy and an ability for law enforcement to find people who have committed some pretty heinous crimes. And I think the method that we’re using currently gives you that balance.’

And if these issues can be resolved, our tiny DNA database of 123 000 profiles could be significantly expanded. It could then be used for cross-referencing like databases elsewhere in the world.

Chantal: ‘So, in what way do you think legislation should be changed?’

Col Frazenburg: ‘Well, it would be advisable to have as many as possible of arrestees on the database so that you can compare that to the crime samples that we get it.’

In parts of the world where national DNA databases have been implemented, crime solving has skyrocketed. And there’s another benefit.

Vanessa: ‘It becomes such a strong form of evidence that when a suspect is presented with a positive DNA match that links them to the crime they plead guilty. In the UK, 82% of suspects that are presented with this type of evidence, plead guilty – 82%! You can imagine what that does to your criminal justice administration.’

Deputy Chief Doan says those cases solved with DNA profiles did not violate anyone’s rights.

David: ‘We don’t think these people’s privacy, the suspects’ privacies, were violated because I don’t know anything about their genetic history. I simply know what their DNA looks like in 13 places.’

But until we have new DNA legislation in place, criminals will continue to get away with murder in this country.

Vanessa: ‘I think it needs to be urgently addressed because I think two years is already too long to have waited to pass this urgently required legislation.’


Change a Life cycle race kicks off in JHB last week

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

A chain is only as strong as its weakest link…..This is the analogy we use in our DNA Awareness Workshops which we have now started to host throughout SA in an effort to educate first responders as to the value of DNA evidence and how to preserve a crime scene.

The message is that they (i.e. the ‘first responders’ such as security guards, paramedics or police reservists etc) are part of the ‘chain of custody’ of that evidence. If they fail to secure the crime scene and allow the crime scene to be interfered with thus resulting in the loss or destruction of vital evidence, they have effectively broken that chain. We can have all the DNA laws, forensic scientists, CSI’s and Forensic labs in place, but if we cannot collect the evidence, the rest is worth nothing.

It struck me whilst en route back from JHB today, that we can take this analogy slightly further. If we consider SA the chain, then crime is it weakest link.. Further still, if the strong part of the chain is the majority, then why is the minority, the one weak link, allowed to ruin it for the rest of us? We need to get rid of that one weak link and as the majority, take back what the minority have taken away from us. Maybe we need to go back one step and start small, with tiny gestures that collectively make us strong?

Mnandi Bestbier & Ursula du Plooy (Change a Life Trust) with Vanessa Lynch & Russell Loubser (CEO of the JSE) at The Change a Life function

Chatting to the CEO of the JSE, Russell Loubser at the Change a Life Cycle Race send off last night (The Mike Thomson Change a Life Trust is one of the DNA Project’s biggest sponsors), we spoke about this very thing. Ironically, his bicycle chain had broken on a practice run over the weekend and he pulled off the side of the road in the middle of nowhere when a man came bounding up to him, not to steal his bicycle, but to help him repair the chain. In time, the chain was put together through a collective effort and Russell was soon on his way.

It was such a small gesture, a cameo in time where camaraderie prevailed. As South African’s, we have lost this due to the small minority (the criminals) in SA casting such a large net of fear over the majority of us. Surely we should start, little by little if we have to, taking back from that small element of society what we deserve as the majority shareholders. I am not for one moment suggesting that we not be careful, but what I am suggesting is that we maybe don’t let the fear always prevail. That fear his been put there by the minority and we deserve to take some of it back but trusting each other a little more now and again. The cyclists who annually participate in the now iconic cycle race, which this year runs through Malawi, demonstrate camaraderie at the highest level.

As always, it is such a privilege to be part of this ever growing race which raises funds for the Mike Thomson Change a Life Trust, of which the DNA Project is one of its beneficiaries. Whilst the race is always an amazing event from start to finish, the reason why the race is held every year is always at the forefront of the festivities.

Philip Mellor (Commercial Director of First Freight Couriers) with Vanessa Lynch

Philip Mellor of First Freight Couriers with Vanessa Lynch

The sponsorship that this race now receives has meant that all of the cyclists entry fees can be used solely for distribution amongst the beneficiaries of the Trust. These supporters of the Trust are willing to get involved in any which way they can in an effort to strive for a brighter and safer future for all South Africans. And as the heading of this blog suggests, it is an accumulation of the small things that ultimately make the big difference. A small gesture from First Freight Couriers services means that all of our DNA Awareness booklets as well as training equipment is dispatched anywhere in South Africa at no cost to us. This is a huge saving which means with the money we save on distribution costs, we can offer more free DNA awareness workshops in SA – we need to support companies like First Freight Couriers who give freely to make a difference.

All these little changes eventually add up and suddenly, from one ‘tree’ of hope we have a forest of possibilities.

Vanessa


Have you voted on our Poll yet?

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

We have upgraded our website to include a Poll which will change periodically and invite your opinions on certain issues. This week’s Poll asks you to tell us whether you would volunteer your DNA profile for inclusion on the National DNA Database?

What is the issue?

The use of DNA in criminal intelligence is often misunderstood by Human Rights Groups, which immediately presume that the DNA of an individual is being used for purposes other than Criminal Intelligence. Some fears include that information on a person’s medical disposition to diseases will be given to insurance companies.

These fears are however groundless as:

(i) A DNA profile is stored on the DNA database as a sequence of numbers, which simply act as a unique identifier.

(ii) The DNA Profile is obtained from a set of 10 markers located in the ‘junk’ or ‘non-coded DNA’, ensuring that no genetic disposition or other distinguishing feature may be read from the profile. Just as one cannot tell from looking at a fingerprint, whether the owner of that print has a pre-disposition to cancer, this principle applies equally to a DNA profile that has been processed for entry onto a DNA database.  This is because the STR loci used in crime detection have no biological function, so this kind of information does not become available to the profiler. Furthermore, many genes and numerous environmental factors determine most diseases and behavioral tendencies. So it is very unlikely that a mere correlation between a non-coding region of DNA (STR) and a physical or behavioral characteristic will allow anyone to accurately predict these conditions.

(iii) The purpose for which a DNA profile may be used is limited by law to the detection of crime, the investigation of crime or the conduct of a prosecution and, most importantly, to the entry of the DNA profile onto the DNA database. The presence of a DNA profile on a National DNA database does not constitute nor signify a criminal record nor does it impact on the individual in any way, particularly if that individual has no intention of ever committing a crime.

(iv) Regulatory bodies rigorously monitor quality assurance to ensure reliability and accuracy of collection, analysis and interpretation of DNA evidence.

The way in which DNA is collected from a person or suspect is non invasive and involves a simple buccal swab or finger prick. If we consider that we already allow the police to demand a breath or blood sample where the person is suspected of impaired driving, then taking a swab from a person’s mouth is no more intrusive than taking a breath or blood sample.

The retention and further analysis of an individual’s DNA sample is a more sensitive matter, as it is possible to sequence the entirety of a person’s genetic make-up, obtaining information of a personal nature. It is for this reason that proposed new legislation in South Africa should not allow for the retention of samples taken from suspects, once a full DNA profile has been obtained and loaded onto the DNA Database. In contrast, a crime scene sample will form part of the evidence used to build a case and aid in an investigation, and, as such, it must be retained indefinitely in the same way as any other form of ‘real’ evidence such as a bullet casing or a weapon found at a crime scene.

Individuals have an expectation of privacy regarding their DNA information. However, in countries such as South Africa, where crime levels are unacceptably high, the state and human rights organizations have recognized that a person’s right to privacy has to be weighed up against the public’s right to safety. The protection of the public from criminals is an obligation of the state and the authority to take a DNA sample, from someone arrested on suspicion of a crime, should thus be warranted as it furthers the state’s ability to detect and prevent criminal activity.

What do you think?

Vanessa