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DNA Privacy Gets First U.S. Supreme Court Test in Rape Case

Posted on February 22, 2013 by Dissent

Greg Stohr reports:

When Alonzo King was arrested for assault in 2009 after pointing a shotgun at several people, authorities had no reason to think he was also a rapist.

Then officials swabbed his cheek at the Wicomico County, Maryland, booking facility and ran his DNA through a nationwide database. The check linked King to an unsolved 2003 rape.

Now King’s conviction for the rape is set for argument next week at the U.S. Supreme Court, which will consider whether Maryland is violating the Constitution by collecting DNA samples from people arrested for serious crimes before they’re convicted.

Read more on Bloomberg.

Related posts:

  • OKC Police rape kit info exposed in data breach of DNA contractor
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