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Please see our “Did You Know?” section toward the end of this issue. The Tennessee state Senate passed a bill to require anyone arrested for a violent crime to give a D-N-A sample that would be placed in a statewide database. The measure was sponsored by Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey of Blountville in response to the unsolved murder of Johnia Berry in December 2004. Berry was stabbed to death only 12 days before she was to receive a degree with honors from East Tennessee State University in Johnson City. She was 21. She was attacked by a knife-wielding man in her Knoxville apartment. Berry's parents attended the Senate session and pressed Ramsey's voting button to help unanimously pass the bill. The companion measure is scheduled for consideration in the budget subcommittee of the House Finance Committee on Wednesday. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref02.html Time Limits Targeted In Sex Assault Cases Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref04.html New and ongoing cases involving the use of DNA evidence include: Washington - State Supreme Court judges issued a common sense opinion in an important DNA case. By a 7-2 vote, the justices said that collection of DNA samples from felons is constitutional. The jurists rejected the opponent's argument that taking DNA samples from convicts violates their privacy rights." "The state already collects from convicted persons identifying information such as photographs and fingerprints; a DNA sample is simple another piece of identifying information," said Justice Charles Johnson, writing for the majority that included Chief Justice Gerry Alexander and Justices Barbara Madsen and James Johnson. Justices Tom Chambers, Susan Owens and Bobbe Bridge issued concurring opinions. Justices Richard Sanders and Mary Fairhurst dissented. Collection of DNA samples from convicted felons is critically important because it can be used to link inmates to other crimes. The DNA database is a valuable law enforcement tool. In his majority opinion, Justice Charles Johnson said convicts have a lesser expectation of privacy than the general population, as their identities and physical characteristics have already become part of the public record - in police reports, for example. It was a solid legal decision backed by common sense. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref03.html Oregon - Detectives said today that DNA testing has tied a 27-year-old man accused of fatally beating and dumping a woman's body in Northeast Portland last month to an unsolved killing 12 1/2 years ago of a high school sophomore who was shot in the head and left half-naked on the grounds of an elementary school outside of Oakland, Calif. Williams, who was 14 and attending a Catholic high school in Oakland at the time of the California killing, was arrested in Portland on April 20 in the killing of Sharvettia Monique Brown. Brown, 37, died April 14 of blunt force trauma and was found in the 1800 block of Northeast Lombard Street about 4:17 a.m. Months before Brown's killing, Portland detectives were investigating links through DNA evidence between a Feb. 4, 2006, residential burglary on Northeast Bryant Street, a March 17, 2006, stabbing in the head of a woman on a Northeast Portland street, and the November 1994 killing of LeBlanc in California. New Jersey - An already-incarcerated Montclair resident, facing charges of assault, kidnapping and weapons possession, has just been additionally charged with theft in connection with a West Caldwell burglary spree, according to the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office. North Carolina - A woman's emotional testimony detailing a sexual assault by a stranger five years ago in Wilmington could not have been more compelling for jurors to hear. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref07.html California - Authorities say DNA evidence has helped them make an arrest in the 2005 murder of an elderly Kern County woman. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref08.html Alaska - The FBI's Combined DNA Index System, or CODIS, was created as a tool for law enforcement throughout the country to use to identify criminals who may be in different states. It allows DNA to be used much like fingerprints, to solve crimes. She had left her residence for classes at the UAA campus early on the morning of September 28, but never made it to class. Her body was found in McHugh Creek that afternoon. Authorities say she had been raped and severely beaten before she fell off of a cliff into the creek. The rape and murder of 18-year-old Bonnie Craig rocked the Anchorage community 13 years ago. It's been so long since her death, Craig's mother says she almost lost hope of ever finding her daughter's killer. The very nature of Alaska can make it hard for murders like Craig's to be solved. "Alaska is a very transient state. So a lot of people move from the state on us--not only the suspects, but witnesses and families. And the older a case is, the more people forget," said Timothy Hunyor of the Trooper Cold Case Unit. Now, thanks to DNA, authorities say 37-year-old Kenneth Dion committed the crime. "The marrying of technology with forensic science really does help law enforcement solve cases that would have otherwise in the past gone unsolved," said F.B.I. spokesperson, Eric Gonzalez. So why has it taken 13 years to solve the Bonnie Craig case? The answer is: money. The state crime lab is under-funded. Combine that with a lack of manpower, and you have a backlog of more than 1,000 DNA samples waiting to be entered in the CODIS DNA System. "It is a high priority for us, but we do have other crime scenes going on. And with the urgency behind those, it kind of gets put on the back burner and we just get to it whenever. And hopefully it won't burn," said Megan Peters of the Alaska State Troopers. While the process may have taken more than a decade, investigators and the community made sure Craig's mystery would one day be solved. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref09.html California -DNA samples saved from Los Angeles rapes and killings between 1987 and 1998 have led to a man being convicted of 11 counts of serial murder. A jury on Monday convicted former pizza deliveryman and crack cocaine dealer Chester Turner in connection with the deaths of 10 women, one who was pregnant with a viable 26-week-old fetus, The Los Angeles Times reported. The women ranged in age from 21 to 45. Their strangled and battered bodies were found strewn around South Los Angeles over an 11-year period. In 1995, David Jones, a part-time janitor described by a psychiatrist of having the mental capacity of an 8-year-old, was convicted of three killings and sentenced to 36 years to life in state prison. In 2001, cold case Detective Cliff Shepard ordered DNA tests that exonerated Jones, who was released and paid $720,000 from the city. However, the DNA was a perfect match to Turner, who faces sentencing Wednesday. The jury's only options are life sentences or death, the Times said. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref10.html Louisiana - A convicted felon arrested after DNA linked him to a cold case in West Monroe pleaded guilty to armed robbery Monday. State District Judge Carl Sharp then sentenced Harvey Jenkins, 29, to 50 years in prison without the benefit of probation, parole or suspension of sentence. Jenkins was arrested in July for a March 2004 assault on a female employee of Glenwood Regional Medical Center. The woman was stabbed in the chest and her purse was stolen in the hospital parking lot. The case remained unsolved until Jenkins' DNA information was processed in preparation for his release from the Winn Correctional Center, where he was serving time on an unrelated charge. Assistant District Attorney Stephen Sylvester gave the West Monroe Police Department credit for sticking with the case for so long. "My hat goes off to the West Monroe Police Department," Sylvester said. "They did an excellent job seeing this thing until the end." Jenkins had also been charged with aggravated second-degree battery, but that count was dropped as part of the plea. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref111.html Iowa - DNA taken from the victim and scene of a November assault is a virtual match for accused attacker Jonathan Powell, a criminalist testified today. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref12.html North Carolina - A suspect arrested this month in Georgia has been returned to Raleigh to face numerous felony charges. James Bernard Henderson, 40, is charged with first degree rape, first degree sex offense, first degree burglary and first degree kidnapping. The charges stem from an attack that occurred more than seven years ago -- during the early hours of Sept. 7, 1999. The victim, who was 28 at the time, was awakened and assaulted by an armed suspect who had entered her apartment. The suspect fled the scene after committing the crimes and had remained unidentified. In March 2006, the victim's sexual assault evidence kit was submitted to the SBI as part of a statewide initiative to perform DNA testing on unsolved rape cases. On March 21, 2007, the Raleigh Police Department was notified that DNA present in the kit had been matched to Henderson. RPD Special Victims Unit detectives, who had initiated a re-examination of the case before receiving the DNA match, conducted additional investigation and determined that Henderson was likely residing in Hephzibah, Ga. He was arrested there April 6 by U.S. marshals. Henderson is in custody at the Wake County jail. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref13.html Minnesota - A warrant has been issued for the arrest of a 25-year-old Rochester man facing a string of charges in connection with a home invasion in December. Charles Antonio Gayles, no permanent address, is charged with attempted aggravated robbery in the first degree, two counts of first-degree burglary and one count of making terroristic threats. Authorities linked Gayles to the crime through DNA in a hat found on the ground outside the residence where the incident occurred. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref14.html Alabama - A brutal rape case that had gone cold for more than five years has been resolved using the latest technology to match prints and DNA. A cold case unit formed in 2005 within the Alabama Bureau of Investigation is credited with bringing 29-year-old Redius Worthy to justice, said District Attorney Randall Houston. Worthy, who admitted to the crime in court Thursday, was sentenced to 40 years in prison by Circuit Judge John Bush. The night of June 10, 2000, a 26-year-old Chilton County woman was attacked in her home. She was raped repeatedly, sodomized and severely beaten, said Assistant District Attorney Jennifer Jordan. The cold case unit works cases that can be solved by matching DNA, said ABI Cpl. Lynn Sutton, who chose the rape case as the first one the unit looked into. "I never worked the case when it first happened," Sutton said. "Her evidence was in our locker, and I saw it every time I went in there. I felt like I knew her. One of the happiest days of my life was when I told her we had a name to tie to the evidence." During the attack, the rapist left a print of his palm, soaked in the victim's blood, on a wall. State investigators used updated fingerprint systems to get a partial match to Worthy, who was serving a sentence for robbery out of Bibb County at Easterling Correctional Facility, court records state. Palm prints usually aren't taken as part of the records in criminal investigations. Investigators had cut out the section of drywall at the victim's home that had Worthy's prints. ABI investigators got a court order to get a set of Worthy's palm prints and a sample of his DNA. It was a perfect match, Jordan said. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref15.html Texas - A convicted burglar who was scheduled to be released from a Florida prison next week is facing new accusations in Fort Worth that he raped and strangled a 23-year-old medical student almost 25 years ago. Lucky Odom, who had previously been sentenced to five years' probation in Tarrant County for the 1981 rape of a Fort Worth woman, was identified as a suspect in the 1982 death of Kathryn Munroe after a database linked his DNA to evidence in the case, police said. The link has brought some relief to Munroe's family but outrage to Odom's rape victim, who said the man shouldn't have been on the streets to harm another woman. "He shouldn't have ever been released," the woman said in an interview with the Star-Telegram. "He should have been kept behind bars for years. No telling how many people he's probably hurt or killed." The Star-Telegram typically does not identify accusers in sexual-assault cases. Anyone who may have known Kathryn Munroe or Lucky Odom around the time of the 1982 slaying is asked to call Fort Worth police Detective Manny Reyes at 817-392-4307. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref16.html Pennsylvania - Evidence collected from the body of a woman found dumped in a gravel parking lot last month led investigators to charge a man who lived near the victim. Lawrence County authorities charged Gaylord Spell, 44, of New Castle, with homicide and abuse of a corpse in connection with 40-year-old Sueann Brest's death. Her naked body was found March 1 in an abandoned lot near the Lawrence County vocational-technical school in Shenango Township, authorities said. The lack of blood in the parking lot indicates her body was dumped there after she was murdered elsewhere. An autopsy revealed the mother of four had been bludgeoned with a hammer or tire iron and died of massive head injuries. A national DNA database found blood and semen taken from Brest's body came from Spell, officials said. Spell's DNA had been sampled because he had been convicted of assault in Virginia, District Attorney John Bongivengo said. The day Brest's body was found, a passer-by about 25 miles away found bloody women's clothing along a road in Adams Township, Butler County, police said. A pair of size 12 men's slippers also was found near the clothes. Also, a state trooper on March 7 found a sofa arm cover with blood on it along a road in Portersville, about 15 miles from where the body was found. Investigators said a search of Spell's house Friday found a sofa with the same pattern that matched the sofa arm cover. Spell worked a few miles from where the bloodied clothing was found and told police he wore a size 12 shoe, authorities said. Spell, however, denied knowing Brest, police said. Spell was held in the Lawrence County Jail without bond. It was not immediately known if he had an attorney. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Thursday. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref17.html Michigan - A partially eaten cinnamon bun left in a stolen car led to the arrest and conviction of a Detroit man for a crime that occurred two years ago. Norman O'Neil Wheeler, 40, was charged after a lengthy investigation by Eastpointe Detective Eric Keiser of the Macomb Auto Theft Squad. Wheeler was in prison on an unrelated car theft, according to Keiser and was arrested on the Eastpointe charge because experts at the Michigan State Police Crime Laboratory in Sterling Heights linked DNA from the cinnamon bun to Wheeler. Wheeler pleaded guilty April 2 to unlawfully driving away an auto, police said. He is set to be sentenced May 22. The incident began when Eastpointe officer Ed Lulko was dispatched to the Walgreen drugstore, 17755 Eight Mile Road, on Dec. 11, 2004, on a stolen car investigation. A witness told Lulko that she saw a man drive into the Walgreen lot in one car, break out the window of a second car and drive away. "Officer Lulko found the partially eaten pastry in the car and sent it to the Michigan State Police crime laboratory with hopes that the DNA left on the roll could lead to the identity of the perpetrator," said Keiser. Eastpointe Detective Lt. Leo Borowsky said that even though Wheeler is in prison, police decided to prosecute him to send a message to other car thieves. "We've been fortunate catching car thieves because of the work of our detectives and assistance from MATS," Borowsky said. Dennis Lippert, director of the crime laboratory, said every part of a person's body has DNA. He said newer techniques can amplify small amounts of DNA and yield a genetic profile. Lippert said authorities put the DNA in an identifying system, which basically searches for a matching DNA. Because he was a convicted criminal, Wheeler's DNA was on file and was matched with that found on the cinnamon bun. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref18.html Chicago - DNA tests that exonerated Jerry Miller for a 1981 kidnapping and rape have implicated another man in the crime, prosecutors disclosed Monday. Did You Know? Topic: Mini DNA replicator could benefit world's poorA pocket-sized device that runs on two AA batteries and copies DNA as accurately as expensive lab equipment has been developed by researchers in the US. The device has no moving parts and costs just $10 to make. It runs polymerase chain reactions (PCRs), to generate billions of identical copies of a DNA strand, in as little as 20 minutes. This is much faster than the machines currently in use, which take several hours. "I hope this will make PCR more available," says Victor Ugaz of Texas A&M University in Texas, US, whose group made the new device. He says the system could enable DNA-based tests to be carried out in the field or in developing countries, where large, expensive laboratory equipment is neither practical nor affordable. Running a PCR requires treating DNA strands, along with chemical materials needed to make new DNA strands, at three different temperatures. The highest temperature (95°C) causes two strands of a DNA molecule to separate. The lowest temperature (60°C) makes DNA building blocks stick together. Then, holding the temperature in the middle (72°C), allows an enzyme to quickly assemble replica DNA strands. Facsimile machineTo cycle through these temperatures, a conventional PCR machine heats and cools a large metal block holding multiple tubes containing samples of DNA and the material needed to make copies. In the new device, created by graduate student Nitin Agrawal, a centimetre-wide loop of tubing wraps in a vertical ring around a set of three metal rods. The rods, together the size of an AA battery, are kept at three different temperatures. With this set-up, the parts of the tube closest to each block are heated differently. This keeps the liquid flowing through the millimetre-wide tube, and so the DNA and building blocks cycle automatically through the three temperatures needed for PCR. "It's similar to how a lava lamp works," says Ugaz. As the fluid is heated, it becomes less dense and more buoyant, so it flows upward. When the fluid cools in another part of the loop, it becomes denser and moves down. And because the device only heats the three small blocks of metal, it also runs off just two AA batteries. Incomplete solution"This is a significant advance in the proof of the concept," says biomedical engineer Samuel Sia of Columbia University in New York, US. "It shows you can use convection-driven flow to do PCR in a miniaturized format." The device shows promise for a variety of tests, Sia says, including monitoring levels of HIV virus in a person's body or diagnosing tuberculosis. "There's nothing like this in developing countries," he explains. "There's a great need everywhere in the world for doing DNA- and RNA-based tests." For the full potential of the device to be realised, however, Sia says that cheap and simple methods of preparing samples, by isolating DNA from cells, will be needed along with miniaturised DNA analysis equipment. Source: http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/email_newsletter/vol_43_may_07/vol43_ref20.html Events and conferences for 2007 that may of interest to you include: 18th International Symposium on Human Identification - October 1-4, 2007 Renaissance Hollywood Hotel - Hollywood, California Web site: www.promega.com/geneticsymp18/ AFDAA (Association of DNA Analysts and Administrators) Conference – August 2-3, 2007 – Austin, TX. Contact Joseph Warren 817-735-5107 Web site: www.AFDAA.org The DNA Informant is a free bi-weekly email newsletter, published by DNA Labs International. DNA Labs International is a private, ISO 17025 Accredited, Forensic Serology and DNA Identity Testing Laboratory, founded in 2004 by a Board Certified Fellow in Molecular Biology with over two decades of experience in Forensic Serology and DNA Analysis in United States Crime Labs. Our primary mission is to help our clients identify criminals within their jurisdiction by providing timely, accurate and cost effective DNA testing results. To do this we created an organization based on industry best practices from over 20 State Crime Labs around the United States. We are located in Deerfield Beach, Florida, just minutes from the Fort Lauderdale airport. DNA Labs International’s services are now available for individual cases and outsourcing contracts. Please keep us in mind as you start to consider your outsourcing needs, regular and rush cases and DNA case review. Editor: Karen Daurie Karen.Daurie@DNALabsInternational.com If you would like to be removed from our mailing list, please click on http://www.dnalabsinternational.com/remove_newsletter.html
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