CA Attorney General Echoes Concerns Voiced against DNA Proposition
Tuesday, October 19, 2004 at 05:44AM
TheSpook
All Arrested, even those who are later found inncocent, will have DNA Taken from them
Attorney General Bill Lockyer, the highest-profile
supporter of a Nov. 2 ballot measure to greatly expand the collection
of DNA samples, now is echoing opponents' concerns about two key
provisions in the initiative. Proposition 69 would require taking DNA
samples not only from convicted criminals but from anyone arrested for
an alleged felony starting in 2009. And those who are never charged or
eventually are found innocent would have to petition a judge, a
prosecutor and the state Department of Justice to have their genetic
fingerprints removed from the statewide database. Critics say the twin
provisions would ensnare the innocent. "I personally wouldn't have put
arrests in the measure," Lockyer said on San Francisco public radio
station KQED's Forum program last week. "I would have allowed for a
much simpler process to get off the file." Lockyer continues to support
the proposition as the only currently available way to create a DNA
database of all felons, after the Legislature three times rejected such
a move, spokeswoman Hallye Jordan said Thursday. California now
collects DNA from those convicted of any of 36 serious felonies. Prop.
69 would quadruple the current databank to a projected 1 million
samples in four years. [more ]
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