Genetic Sleuthing
No sooner did the U.S. Senate pass a bill barring genetic discrimination than the state of
The technology of genetic genealogy has progressed rapidly providing insight into human migration and ancestry. Apparently now the technology has progressed to the point where its use can be vital in a criminal investigation.
Although currently used to make exact matches between a DNA sample and a DNA profile in the database, the new policy allows the crime lab to tell investigators who might be related to the person who left the DNA sample. It's not enough for a conviction, but enough to identify, contact and sample the DNA of relatives of the suspect with the eventual goal of finding the suspect.
Familial searches have been common in the UK for the past few years due in part because of the over 4 million profiles of charged criminals and suspects. The practice is not without controversy and even Alec Jeffreys, the discoverer of DNA profiling, believes that using DNA from people who have never been involved with the law raises "potentially rather thorny" civil liberties issues.
Labels: genetic genealogy, genetic profiling, GINA, partial match







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