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Okla. jails begin collecting DNA from arrestees

So far, hundreds of jail inmates have had the insides of their cheeks swabbed, and the samples have been forwarded to Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, which will analyze and upload the genetic profiles to a national FBI database

By Cass Rains
Enid News & Eagle

OKLAHOMA CITY — With no announcement, Oklahoma jails are beginning to collect DNA from individuals arrested on felony charges — the first step in implementing a controversial state law passed two years ago.

So far, hundreds of jail inmates have had the insides of their cheeks swabbed, and the samples have been forwarded to Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, which will analyze and upload the genetic profiles to a national FBI database. The goal is to connect arrestees to unsolved crimes, which could lead to additional charges.

Oklahoma County confirmed it is swabbing arrested inmates, and an OSBI spokeswoman said 12 agencies have been trained so far on collecting DNA from arrestees. A list of those agencies wasn’t immediately available. A Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office spokesman said the county jail has not yet started the process.

The collection of DNA from people arrested, but not yet convicted, on felony charges has spurred opposition from civil rights groups. The Legislature approved the program in 2016, but it has been stalled by lack of funding.

Thanks to a federal grant, DNA swabbing is moving forward.

The $740,000 grant, provided to OSBI by National Institute of Justice, paid for upgraded equipment, personnel, training of local law enforcement and swab kits. The bureau will need $500,000 annually from the state to continue processing the samples after the grant runs out at the end of 2019, OSBI Criminalistics Division Director Andrea Fielding said.

About 600 samples already have been collected. They will be uploaded to the FBI’s system for matching DNA, called the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS), and entered into the National DNA Index System (NDIS).

Excitement and outrage over the law appear to have faded, but the beginning of DNA collection could reignite debate.

“Wait. What?” said Allie Shinn, deputy director of American Civil Liberties Union of Oklahoma, when told that jails were collecting DNA from arrestees.

The ACLU has called the swabbing of arrestees before conviction a violation of privacy rights and due process, an argument it also made when the Legislature approved the law.

Fielding said she is confident that after results start rolling in next year, state funding will follow.

“What we know will happen, based on what other states have seen, is we’ll identify repeat offenders earlier in their careers,” Fielding said. “This will help catch those criminals before they can offend again. It’s going to save lives.”

Oklahoma joins 30 other states in collecting DNA from felony arrestees, according to DNA Saves, a nonprofit that advocates for such laws.

The state currently enters about 8,000 DNA samples into CODIS annually, taken mostly from convicted felons. Under the expanded law, OSBI estimates that number will jump to 20,000.

Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office is one of the first agencies to begin taking DNA samples under the law. The county jail’s medical staff has been conducting the cheek swabs on individuals convicted of felonies and some misdemeanors for years, but expanding swabs to felony arrestees means more work for employees who already are spread thin, spokesman Mark Opgrande said.

At the jail, DNA typically is taken after arrestees are placed in a cell instead of during the intake process, which includes a mugshot and fingerprints.

To help out the busy medical staff, Sgt. Ziakiya Byers, a deputy, is adding cheek swabs to her daily duties.

“It’s just another thing to do,” Byers said. “I get a daily list that usually includes five to 20 names I have to swab.”

If convicted, arrestees who are swabbed will be charged a $150 “laboratory analysis fee” for each offense, according to the law. That will add another fee to the long list of fines and fees that criminal justice reform advocates argue already burden offenders, who often exit prisons or jails with debt they can’t pay.

Arrestees who are not convicted later can have their DNA expunged from the national database, Fielding said, but the burden is on that person. They must contact OSBI and provide proof that they weren’t convicted of the felony charges.

Shinn, of the ACLU, said the burden should be on the state to remove the DNA of individuals who are not convicted. Most people won’t initiate the process themselves, she said.

Shinn called the collection “an illegal search” and said the ACLU is “looking at all options” to halt the practice.

“This flies in face of the notions of how our criminal justice system is supposed to work,” Shinn said.

Attempts in other states to prevent DNA collection from arrestees have failed. Those include a lawsuit in Maryland that ended up before the U.S. Supreme Court in 2013. In its ruling, the court upheld law enforcement agencies’ right to collect DNA from “individuals charged with but not yet convicted of certain crimes, mainly violent crimes and first-degree burglary.”

Last fall, the ACLU of Minnesota settled a lawsuit against the Dakota County sheriff’s office for seizing DNA without a warrant. In that case, the arrestee had not been convicted of the charges and the settlement required destruction of the defendant’s and others’ DNA samples.

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