DNA dragnets—the mass warrantless DNA testing of individuals whom authorities have neither probable cause nor reasonable suspicion to believe perpetrated a crime, but who merely live or work near a crime scene—have increasingly been used by police departments in a desperate attempt to solve puzzling crimes. The lack of success and the Fourth Amendment constitutional concerns raised by DNA dragnets, however, lead this practice to be suspect. Under the Fourth Amendment, all searches of an individual must be reasonable. The reasonableness of any search typically depends on the government obtaining a warrant prior to the search. While there are well-established exceptions to this rule, DNA dragnets fail to fall within any of these exceptions. I...
This Comment examines the constitutionality of North Carolina’s DNA Database Act of 2010. The Act is...
This Article considers the advent of genetic genealogy, used by law enforcement in capturing the Gol...
“Surreptitious sampling” may be police officers’ trump card in cracking otherwise unsolvable crimes ...
DNA dragnets—the mass warrantless DNA testing of individuals whom authorities have neither probable ...
Pursuant to federal statutes and to laws in all fifty states, the United States government has assem...
This article addresses whether the DNA Act (which requires DNA samples from arrestees) passes consti...
DNA dragnets have attracted both public and scholarly criticisms that have yet to be resolved by the...
Routine DNA sampling following a custodial arrest process is now the norm in many jurisdictions, but...
This article addresses whether the Fourth Amendment is implicated when police surreptitiously collec...
The Fourth Amendment prohibits the government from conducting unreasonable searches and seizures.Whe...
An increasing number of states are enacting laws authorizing the forcible taking and analysis of DNA...
Every state now collects DNA from people convicted of certain offenses. Law enforcement authorities ...
In the past couple of decades, the use of DNA testing has become a major debate in criminal law. Man...
In 1994, the DNA Identification Act permitted the government to establish a national database (CODIS...
On July 25, 2011, in United States v. Mitchell, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held...
This Comment examines the constitutionality of North Carolina’s DNA Database Act of 2010. The Act is...
This Article considers the advent of genetic genealogy, used by law enforcement in capturing the Gol...
“Surreptitious sampling” may be police officers’ trump card in cracking otherwise unsolvable crimes ...
DNA dragnets—the mass warrantless DNA testing of individuals whom authorities have neither probable ...
Pursuant to federal statutes and to laws in all fifty states, the United States government has assem...
This article addresses whether the DNA Act (which requires DNA samples from arrestees) passes consti...
DNA dragnets have attracted both public and scholarly criticisms that have yet to be resolved by the...
Routine DNA sampling following a custodial arrest process is now the norm in many jurisdictions, but...
This article addresses whether the Fourth Amendment is implicated when police surreptitiously collec...
The Fourth Amendment prohibits the government from conducting unreasonable searches and seizures.Whe...
An increasing number of states are enacting laws authorizing the forcible taking and analysis of DNA...
Every state now collects DNA from people convicted of certain offenses. Law enforcement authorities ...
In the past couple of decades, the use of DNA testing has become a major debate in criminal law. Man...
In 1994, the DNA Identification Act permitted the government to establish a national database (CODIS...
On July 25, 2011, in United States v. Mitchell, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held...
This Comment examines the constitutionality of North Carolina’s DNA Database Act of 2010. The Act is...
This Article considers the advent of genetic genealogy, used by law enforcement in capturing the Gol...
“Surreptitious sampling” may be police officers’ trump card in cracking otherwise unsolvable crimes ...