Over the past few years, a powerful new forensic technique has emerged. By uploading DNA from a crime scene to a civilian DNA database, such as GEDmatch, investigators can discover the genetic relatives of the perpetrator and thereby track down the perpetrator himself. This procedure is known as forensic genetic genealogy searching (FGGS), and in under three years it has cracked numerous decades-old cases once thought to be unsolvable. Concerned about genetic privacy and discrimination, most legal commentators have thus far confronted FGGS with raised hackles. They either argue FGGS is a Fourth Amendment search under Carpenter, or that it escapes Carpenter but ought to be severely restricted or prohibited by statute. This Note attempts to s...
On April 24, 2018, a suspect in California’s notorious Golden State Killer cases was arrested after ...
The discovery of DNA typing in the 1980s transformed law enforcement’s ability to exonerate innocent...
Pursuant to federal statutes and to laws in all fifty states, the United States government has assem...
Over the past few years, a powerful new forensic technique has emerged. By uploading DNA from a crim...
As consumer DNA testing gains widespread popularity, so has law enforcement’s interest in leveraging...
This Article considers the advent of genetic genealogy, used by law enforcement in capturing the Gol...
Consumer genetics has exploded, driven by the second-most popular hobby in the United States: geneal...
The continued growth of forensic DNA databases has brought about greater interest in a search method...
Over the course of 2018, a number of suspects in unsolved crimes have been identified through the us...
“Familial searching” in law enforcement DNA databases has been pilloried as a step “towards eugenics...
(Excerpt) Part I of this Note discusses the fundamental science behind DNA and defines and explains ...
In the last year direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic genealogy databases have been used to identify sus...
DNA represents the gold standard of evidence that solves crimes and obtains convictions. Law enfor...
The FBI’s Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) and its component databases are expanding rapidly. Origi...
abstract: This thesis examines the use of two novel technologies in forensic science: familial DNA m...
On April 24, 2018, a suspect in California’s notorious Golden State Killer cases was arrested after ...
The discovery of DNA typing in the 1980s transformed law enforcement’s ability to exonerate innocent...
Pursuant to federal statutes and to laws in all fifty states, the United States government has assem...
Over the past few years, a powerful new forensic technique has emerged. By uploading DNA from a crim...
As consumer DNA testing gains widespread popularity, so has law enforcement’s interest in leveraging...
This Article considers the advent of genetic genealogy, used by law enforcement in capturing the Gol...
Consumer genetics has exploded, driven by the second-most popular hobby in the United States: geneal...
The continued growth of forensic DNA databases has brought about greater interest in a search method...
Over the course of 2018, a number of suspects in unsolved crimes have been identified through the us...
“Familial searching” in law enforcement DNA databases has been pilloried as a step “towards eugenics...
(Excerpt) Part I of this Note discusses the fundamental science behind DNA and defines and explains ...
In the last year direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic genealogy databases have been used to identify sus...
DNA represents the gold standard of evidence that solves crimes and obtains convictions. Law enfor...
The FBI’s Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) and its component databases are expanding rapidly. Origi...
abstract: This thesis examines the use of two novel technologies in forensic science: familial DNA m...
On April 24, 2018, a suspect in California’s notorious Golden State Killer cases was arrested after ...
The discovery of DNA typing in the 1980s transformed law enforcement’s ability to exonerate innocent...
Pursuant to federal statutes and to laws in all fifty states, the United States government has assem...