Ninth Circuit Considers Wholesale DNA Collection
As in, should authorities really be sampling everybody they get their hands on?
Wednesday at 10 am, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is set to hear oral argument in Haskell v. Harris, examining crucial questions of DNA privacy. If you are in the San Francisco Bay Area, this is a unique opportunity to hear debate over how your genetic information can be collected, stored, and shared by law enforcement.
California state law mandates DNA collection from anyone who is arrested for felony, whether or not they are eventually charged or convicted of a crime. That DNA is stored in a database accessible to law enforcement across the country and even around the world. The government has argued that the genetic markers that make up a person's DNA profile are "junk" and provide no more information than a person's fingerprint. However, new research has shown that so-called "junk" DNA actually plays a critical role in controlling how our cells, tissue and organs behave. As we explained last week, that means that when the government collects DNA, it has information that could reveal an extraordinary amount of private information, including familial relationships, medical history, predisposition for disease, and possibly even behavioral tendencies and sexual orientation.
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