AB 1697,
as amended, Donnelly. begin deleteForensic identification: informed consent. end deletebegin insertDNA and forensic identification database and data bank.end insert
Existing law, as amended by the DNA Fingerprint, Unsolved Crime and Innocence Protection Act, Proposition 69, approved by the voters at the November 2, 2004, general election, subjects certain offenders to the collection of buccal swab samples, right thumbprints, a full palm print impression of each hand, and blood specimens or other biological samples for law enforcement identification analysis. The DNA Laboratory of the Department of Justice (DOJ) is required to serve as a repository for blood specimens, buccal swabs, and other biological samples collected, and is required to analyze specimens and samples, and to store, compile, correlate, compare, maintain, and use deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and forensic identification profiles and records related to several functions, including, but not limited to, using anonymous DNA records for training, research, statistical analysis of populations, quality assurance, or quality control. Proposition 69 amended these provisions to include buccal swabs as samples and using anonymous DNA records for quality assurance.
begin insertThis bill would prohibit the DNA and forensic identification database and data bank and the DOJ DNA Laboratory from being used as a source of genetic material for testing, research, or experiments, by any person, agency, or entity seeking to find a causal link between genetics and behavior or health.
end insertThis bill would state that for purposes of these provisions, the terms “research” and “statistical analysis of populations” do not include the use of DNA sequence data for purposes of identifying or characterizing any general correlations between sequence-specific information and behaviors, health, or ethnicity. The bill would state that this type of research or statistical analysis of populations does not serve a forensic identification purpose. The bill also would make conforming changes.
end deleteVote: majority.
Appropriation: no.
Fiscal committee: begin deleteyes end deletebegin insertnoend insert.
State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insertSection 295.2 is added to the end insertbegin insertPenal Codeend insertbegin insert, to read:end insert
begin insertThe DNA and forensic identification database and data
3bank and the Department of Justice DNA Laboratory shall not be
4used as a source of genetic material for testing, research, or
5experiments, by any person, agency, or entity seeking to find a
6causal link between genetics and behavior or health.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
8following:
9(a) In June 2013, the United States Supreme Court upheld the
10authority of government to collect and analyze deoxyribonucleic
11acid (DNA) from individuals arrested for a crime, regardless of
12whether they are ultimately convicted. In his dissent, Justice
13Antonin Scalia concluded that, “as an entirely predictable
14consequence of today’s decision, your DNA can be taken and
15entered into a national DNA database if you are ever arrested,
16rightly or wrongly, and for whatever reason . . . . Today’s judgment
17will, to be sure, have the beneficial effect of solving more crimes;
18then again, so would
the taking of DNA samples from anyone who
19flies on an airplane (surely the Transportation Security
20Administration needs to know the ‘identity’ of the flying public),
21applies for a driver’s license, or attends a public school. Perhaps
P3 1the construction of such a genetic panopticon is wise. But I doubt
2that the proud men who wrote the charter of our liberties would
3have been so eager to open their mouths for royal inspection”
4(Maryland v. King (2013) 133 S.Ct. 1958, 1989).
5(b) Also in June 2013, the United States Court of Appeals for
6the Ninth Circuit upheld the authority of government to retain
7DNA samples indefinitely, long after standard forensic information
8has been extracted and entered into a database for criminal
9identification purposes. In his dissent, Justice Stephen Reinhardt
10noted that “The government has statutory authority to use
its
11indefinite access to stored blood samples in any capacity justified
12by ‘law enforcement identification purposes.’ [citation omitted]
13 However, ‘law enforcement identification purposes’ have not been
14specifically defined or circumscribed by Congress or the courts.
15Whatever limitation envisioned by restricting use of blood samples
16to only those used for ‘law enforcement identification purposes,’
17it does not prevent the reanalysis or testing of stored blood samples
18for certain genetic traits . . . . ‘Law enforcement identification
19purposes’ could include retesting for certain behavior traits. For
20example, behavior geneticists have been researching a purported
21‘crime gene’ that could lead to the use of genetic material for
22‘preventive detentions or other means of social control for those
23identified as genetically predisposed to criminality’” (U.S. v.
24Kriesel (9th Cir. 2013) 720 F.3d 1137, 1160).
25(c) The California Department of Justice (DOJ) maintains
26indefinite access to more than 1.8 million DNA samples. These
27samples contain an individual’s entire genome, and could be tested
28to reveal traits related to ethnicity, health, and behavior. While the
29DOJ may only perform DNA analysis “for identification purposes,”
30this term is not defined, and could include research into the link
31between genes and criminal behavior. Existing law authorizes the
32DOJ to use its samples for research purposes, and its vast collection
33of DNA samples provides the means to study how genetic profiles
34could help preemptively identify individuals predisposed to
35criminal behavior. This emerging field is known as “behavioral
36genomics.”
37(d) Recent research indicates that more than one-half of the
38variance
in antisocial behavior can be attributed to genetic factors
39(C.J. Ferguson, Genetic Contributions to Antisocial Personality
40and Behavior: a Meta-analytic Review from an Evolutionary
P4 1Prospective, Journal of Social Psychology (March-April 2010,
2Volume 150, Issue 2, pp. 160-180)). For example, researchers have
3demonstrated that individuals possessing one particular gene
4variant are statistically more likely to join a gang, and also more
5likely to use a weapon in a fight (Kevin M. Beaver, et al.,
6Monoamine Oxidase A Genotype Is Associated with Gang
7Membership and Weapon Use, Comprehensive Psychiatry (March
82010, Volume 51, Issue 2, pp. 130-134)). The ability of this
9research to identify likely criminals and potential criminals will
10increase dramatically as researchers gain the means to track the
11interaction of thousands of gene variants across millions of
12samples, and correlate these results with
known criminal behaviors.
13The Department of Justice DNA repository offers that capability.
14(e) The ability to perform this analysis is increasingly within
15reach. According to the National Human Genome Research
16Institute, the cost of whole-genome sequencing has decreased more
17than 9,000 fold over the past 10 years.
18(f) It is the intent of the Legislature that nothing in this act shall
19limit, or otherwise affect, the forensic activities of the DOJ
20unrelated to research, or the use of research for quality control or
21quality assurance purposes.
22(g) This act does not amend the DNA Fingerprint, Unsolved
23Crime and Innocence Protection Act,
which was adopted as
24Proposition 69 at the November 2, 2004, statewide general election.
25Statutory authority for the DOJ to perform research using collected
26DNA samples predates the adoption of Proposition 69. Pursuant
27to Section 9605 of the Government Code, “[w]here a section or
28part of a statute is amended, it is not to be considered as having
29been repealed and reenacted in the amended form. The portions
30which are not altered are to be considered as having been the law
31from the time when they were enacted; the new provisions are to
32be considered as having been enacted at the time of the amendment.
33...” Accordingly, the Legislature remains free to address the issue
34of research, a matter that Proposition 69 itself does not “specifically
35authorize or prohibit” (People v. Kelly (2010) 47 Cal.4th 1008,
361025-1026; see also People v. Cooper (2002) 27 Cal.4th 38, 44,
37and County
of San Diego v. San Diego NORML (2008) 165
38Cal.App.4th 798, 830).
Section 295.1 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
(a) The Department of Justice shall perform DNA
2analysis and other forensic identification analysis pursuant to this
3chapter only for identification purposes.
4(b) The Department of Justice Bureau of Criminal Identification
5and Information shall perform examinations of palm prints pursuant
6to this chapter only for identification purposes.
7(c) The DNA Laboratory of the Department of Justice shall
8serve as a repository for blood specimens and buccal swab and
9other biological samples collected, and shall analyze specimens
10and samples, and store, compile, correlate, compare, maintain, and
11use
DNA and forensic identification profiles and records related
12to the following:
13(1) Forensic casework and forensic unknowns.
14(2) Known and evidentiary specimens and samples from crime
15scenes or criminal investigations.
16(3) Missing or unidentified persons.
17(4) Persons required to provide specimens, samples, and print
18impressions under this chapter.
19(5) Legally obtained samples.
20(6) Subject to Section 295.2, anonymous DNA records used for
21training,
research, statistical
analysis of populations, quality
22assurance, or quality control.
23(d) The computerized data bank and database of the DNA
24Laboratory of the Department of Justice shall include files as
25necessary to implement this chapter.
26(e) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring the
27Department of Justice to provide specimens or samples for quality
28control or other purposes to those who request specimens or
29samples.
30(f) Submission of samples, specimens, or profiles for the state
31DNA Database and Data Bank Program shall include information
32as required by the Department of Justice for ensuring search
33capabilities and compliance with National DNA Index System
34(NDIS)
standards.
Section 295.2 is added to the Penal Code, to read:
For purposes of this chapter, the terms “research” and
37“statistical analysis of populations” do not include the use of DNA
38sequence data for purposes of identifying or characterizing any
39general correlations between sequence-specific information and
P6 1behaviors, health, or ethnicity. This type of research or statistical
2analysis of populations does not serve a forensic purpose.
Section 299.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
(a) All DNA and forensic identification profiles and
5other identification information retained by the Department of
6Justice pursuant to this chapter are exempt from any law requiring
7disclosure of information to the public and shall be confidential
8except as otherwise provided in this chapter.
9(b) All evidence and forensic samples containing biological
10material retained by the Department of Justice DNA Laboratory
11or other state law enforcement agency are exempt from any law
12requiring disclosure of information to the public or the return of
13biological specimens, samples, or print impressions.
14(c) Non-DNA forensic
identification information may be filed
15with the offender’s file maintained by the Sex Registration Unit
16of the Department of Justice or in other computerized data bank
17or database systems maintained by the Department of Justice.
18(d) The DNA and other forensic identification information
19retained by the Department of Justice pursuant to this chapter shall
20not be included in the state summary criminal history information.
21However, nothing in this chapter precludes law enforcement
22personnel from entering into a person’s criminal history
23information or offender file maintained by the Department of
24Justice, the fact that the specimens, samples, and print impressions
25required by this chapter have or have not been collected from that
26person.
27(e) The fact that the blood specimens,
saliva or buccal swab
28samples, and print impressions required by this chapter have been
29received by the DNA Laboratory of the Department of Justice shall
30be included in the state summary criminal history information as
31soon as administratively practicable.
32The full palm prints of each hand shall be filed and maintained
33by the Automated Latent Print Section of the Bureau of Criminal
34Identification and Information of the Department of Justice, and
35may be included in the state summary criminal history information.
36(f) DNA samples and DNA profiles and other forensic
37identification information shall be released only to law enforcement
38agencies, including, but not limited to, parole officers of the
39Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation, hearing officers of
40the parole authority, probation officers, the Attorney General’s
P7 1office, district attorneys’ offices, and prosecuting city attorneys’
2offices, unless otherwise specifically authorized by this chapter.
3Dissemination of DNA specimens, samples, and DNA profiles
4and other forensic identification information to law enforcement
5agencies and district attorneys’ offices outside this state shall be
6performed in conformity with the provisions of this chapter.
7(g) A defendant’s DNA and other forensic identification
8information developed pursuant to this chapter shall be available
9to his or her defense counsel upon court order made pursuant to
10Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 1054) of Title 6 of Part 2.
11(h) Except as provided in
subdivision (g) and in order to protect
12the confidentiality and privacy of database and data bank
13information, the Department of Justice and local public DNA
14laboratories shall not otherwise be compelled in a criminal or civil
15proceeding to provide any DNA profile or forensic identification
16database or data bank information or its computer database program
17software or structures to any person or party seeking those records
18or information whether by subpoena or discovery, or other
19procedural device or inquiry.
20(i) (1) (A) Any person who knowingly uses an offender
21specimen, sample, or DNA profile collected pursuant to this chapter
22for other than criminal identification or exclusion purposes, or for
23other than the identification of missing persons, or who knowingly
24discloses DNA or other forensic
identification information
25developed pursuant to this section to an unauthorized individual
26or agency, for other than criminal identification or exclusion
27purposes, or for the identification of missing persons, in violation
28of this chapter, shall be punished by imprisonment in a county jail
29not exceeding one year or by imprisonment in the state prison for
3016 months, or two or three years.
31(B) Any person who, for the purpose of financial gain,
32knowingly uses a specimen, sample, or DNA profile collected
33pursuant to this chapter for other than criminal identification or
34exclusion purposes or for the identification of missing persons or
35who, for the purpose of financial gain, knowingly discloses DNA
36or other forensic identification information developed pursuant to
37this section to an unauthorized individual or agency, for other than
38criminal
identification or exclusion purposes or for other than the
39identification of missing persons, in violation of this chapter, shall,
40in addition to the penalty provided in subparagraph (A), be
P8 1punished by a criminal fine in an amount three times that of any
2financial gain received or ten thousand dollars ($10,000),
3whichever is greater.
4(2) (A) If any employee of the Department of Justice knowingly
5uses a specimen, sample, or DNA profile collected pursuant to this
6chapter for other than criminal identification or exclusion purposes,
7or knowingly discloses DNA or other forensic identification
8information developed pursuant to this section to an unauthorized
9individual or agency, for other than criminal identification or
10exclusion purposes or for other than the identification of missing
11persons, in violation of this chapter, the
department shall be liable
12in civil damages to the donor of the DNA identification information
13in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each violation,
14plus attorney’s fees and costs. In the event of multiple disclosures,
15the total damages available to the donor of the DNA is limited to
16fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) plus attorney’s fees and costs.
17(B) (i) Notwithstanding any other law, this shall be the sole
18and exclusive remedy against the Department of Justice and its
19employees available to the donor of the DNA.
20(ii) The Department of Justice employee disclosing DNA
21identification information in violation of this chapter shall be
22absolutely immune from civil liability under this or any other law.
23(3) It is not a violation of this section for a law enforcement
24agency in its discretion to publicly disclose the fact of a DNA
25profile match, or the name of the person identified by the DNA
26match when this match is the basis of law enforcement’s
27investigation, arrest, or prosecution of a particular person, or the
28identification of a missing or abducted person.
29(j) It is not a violation of this chapter to furnish DNA or other
30forensic identification information of the defendant to his or her
31defense counsel for criminal defense purposes in compliance with
32discovery.
33(k) It is not a violation of this section for law enforcement to
34release DNA and other forensic identification information
35developed pursuant to this chapter to a jury or grand jury, or in a
36document
filed with a court or administrative agency, or as part
37of a judicial or administrative proceeding, or for this information
38to become part of the public transcript or record of proceedings
39when, in the discretion of law enforcement, disclosure is necessary
40because the DNA information pertains to the basis for law
P9 1enforcement’s identification, arrest, investigation, prosecution, or
2exclusion of a particular person related to the case.
3(l) It is not a violation of this section to include information
4obtained from a file in a transcript or record of a judicial
5proceeding, or in any other public record when the inclusion of
6the information in the public record is authorized by a court, statute,
7or decisional law.
8(m) Subject
to Section 295.2, it is not a violation of this section
9for the DNA Laboratory of the Department of Justice, or an
10organization retained as an agent of the Department of Justice, or
11a local public laboratory to use anonymous records or criminal
12history information obtained pursuant to this chapter for training,
13research, statistical analysis of populations, or quality assurance
14or quality control.
15(n) The Department of Justice shall make public the
16methodology and procedures to be used in its DNA program prior
17to the commencement of DNA testing in its laboratories. The
18Department of Justice shall review and consider on an ongoing
19basis the findings and results of any peer review and validation
20studies submitted to the department by members of the relevant
21scientific community experienced in the use of DNA technology.
22This
material shall be available to criminal defense counsel upon
23court order made pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section
241054) of Title 6 of Part 2.
25(o) In order to maintain the computer system security of the
26Department of Justice DNA and Forensic Identification Database
27and Data Bank Program, the computer software and database
28structures used by the DNA Laboratory of the Department of
29Justice to implement this chapter are confidential.
Section 299.6 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
(a) Nothing in this chapter shall prohibit the Department
32of Justice, in its sole discretion, from the sharing or disseminating
33of population database or data bank information, DNA profile or
34forensic identification database or data bank information, analytical
35data and results generated for forensic identification database and
36data bank purposes, or protocol and forensic DNA analysis methods
37and quality assurance or quality control procedures with any of
38the following:
39(1) Federal, state, or local law enforcement agencies.
P10 1(2) Crime laboratories, whether public or private, that serve
2federal,
state, and local law enforcement agencies that have been
3approved by the Department of Justice.
4(3) The attorney general’s office of any state.
5(4) Any state or federally authorized auditing agent or board
6that inspects or reviews the work of the Department of Justice
7DNA Laboratory for the purpose of ensuring that the laboratory
8meets ASCLD/LAB and FBI standards for accreditation and quality
9assurance standards necessary under this chapter and for the state’s
10participation in CODIS and other national or international
11crime-solving networks.
12(5) Subject to Section 295.2, any third party that the Department
13of Justice deems
necessary to assist the department’s crime
14laboratory with statistical analyses of population databases, or the
15analyses of forensic protocol, research methods, or quality control
16procedures, or to assist in the recovery or identification of human
17remains for humanitarian purposes, including identification of
18missing persons.
19(b) The population databases and data banks of the DNA
20Laboratory of the Department of Justice may be made available
21to and searched by the FBI and any other agency participating in
22the FBI’s CODIS System or any other national or international
23law enforcement database or data bank system.
24(c) The Department of Justice may provide portions of biological
25samples including blood specimens, saliva samples, and buccal
26swab samples collected pursuant to this
chapter to local public law
27enforcement DNA laboratories for identification purposes provided
28that the privacy provisions of this section are followed by the local
29public law enforcement laboratory and if each of the following
30conditions is met:
31(1) The procedures used by the local public DNA laboratory
32for the handling of specimens and samples and the disclosure of
33results are the same as those established by the Department of
34Justice pursuant to Sections 297, 298, and 299.5.
35(2) The methodologies and procedures used by the local public
36DNA laboratory for DNA or forensic identification analysis are
37compatible with those used by the Department of Justice, or
38otherwise are determined by the Department of Justice to be valid
39and appropriate for identification purposes.
P11 1(3) Only tests of value to law enforcement for identification
2purposes are performed and a copy of the results of the analysis
3are sent to the Department of Justice.
4(4) All provisions of this section concerning privacy and security
5are followed.
6(5) The local public law enforcement DNA laboratory assumes
7all costs of securing the specimens and samples and provides
8appropriate tubes, labels, and materials necessary to secure the
9specimens and samples.
10(d) Any local DNA laboratory that produces DNA profiles of
11known reference samples for inclusion within the permanent files
12of the state’s DNA Data Bank program shall follow the policies
13of the DNA Laboratory
of the Department of Justice.
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