Subscribe to Print Edition | Mon., December 31, 2007 Tevet 22, 5768 | | Israel Time: 08:59 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Rosner's Domain
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Advertising
Books Arts & Leisure Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File Magazine
del.icio.us
Digg It!  new
Last update - 07:54 31/12/2007
Police gather saliva samples from prisoners for national DNA bank
By Jonathan Lis
Tags: civil rights, Israel, DNA 

Police started collecting DNA samples from prisoners Thursday in order to add them to a comprehensive database they have been building since February.

Crime scene investigators from the Israel Police's Division of Crime Identification (DCI) on Thursday took cheek swabs from 183 prisoners in two wings of the Ayalon prison. This is the first time police have taken DNA samples from prisoners, not just recent convicts or suspects.

P
Advertisement
olice are expected to continue taking DNA samples at other Israeli jails.

The database was legislated in 2005 in order to let police investigators cross-reference genetic profiles taken from crime scenes and identify serial offenders more efficiently.

DNA samples also have been collected from persons detained for questioning under caution.

Legally, police may use the DNA database only in cases involving violent crimes, property crimes and security crimes. Only felons convicted of such crimes were required to provide DNA samples on Thursday.

The prisoners were notified in advance, and were asked to allow DCI personnel to swab the inside of their cheeks, in order to collect a saliva sample. A police source said Thursday that none of the prisoners objected.

"The law orders us to take real-time samples from anyone convicted [of relevant crimes]," said Chief Superintendent Dr. Zafrir Goren, who heads the DCI's laboratories, "but we must also work retroactively and take samples from anyone who was convicted and jailed for these crimes. These samples will be entered into our national DNA database."

Goren said Thursday that the samples being collected will also be used to help solve open cases.

The database, which began operating in February 2007, now contains the genetic profiles of more than 15,000 convicts. In the past 10 months, it has led to 130 indictments.

Even so, in order for this database to be considered effective in international terms, it will have to contain DNA samples of more than 5 percent of the country's population - more than 350,000 genetic profiles.

When the database was established, human rights organizations were concerned that letting the state hold such a vast quantity of information about its citizens would harm privacy. The police therefore decided to adopt the British model first - producing a genetic profile of every suspect and every convict, to be stored with no time limit.

The Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee held extensive discussions on this subject, with representatives of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, and restricted the use of the database.

Among other things, the new law states that data on a suspect will be erased from the database after seven years if criminal proceedings against him end without a conviction. The genetic profiles of convicts will be erased after 20 years.

The database will also not be open for research use, unless the research is approved by a committee headed by a judge. The police will have to provide annual reports on the number of samples collected and the number destroyed.

Related articles:
  • DNA from murder probe yields conviction in unrelated rape case
  • Editorial: DNA in the service of justice
  • Bookmark to del.icio.us
    Au revoir Assad
    Sarkozy says he'll cut ties with Syria over the Lebanon presidential crisis.
    Women march on
    Women in Black marks its 20th year, but the occupation continues.
     Today Online
    PM spokesman says Israel taking bin Laden threat seriously
    Responses: 442
    Pinpointed IAF attacks in Gaza more precise, hurt fewer civilians
    Responses: 175
    Harel and Issacharoff: Nipping new Jewish terror group in the bud
    Responses: 125
    Women in Black marks 20th year, but occupation continues
    Responses: 88
    France to cut ties to Syria over Lebanese presidential crisis
    Responses: 77
    Rosner's Domain
    "Let us hope the peace process will be failure" (WTR)
    Rosner's Guest: Jennifer Moses on namby-pamby Judaism
    As foreign policy becomes more dominant in the campaign, Israel will draw closer to its center
    Poll: The most likely event to happen in 2008


    More Headlines
    08:30 Diskin, negotiator clash on prisoner release terms
    08:34 Study: Number of Palestinians killed by IDF dropped 43% in '07
    08:43 Striking lecturers aim to get university presidents to resign
    07:40 Number of 'large families' rises, despite welfare payment cuts
    08:44 Arab pupils lag behind Jewish peers in reading comprehension
    08:32 Palestinians: IDF kills Gazan woman, hurts 4 others en route from hajj
    07:49 Pension plan for one million workers to kick off with new year
    07:56 Surviving hiker recounts Friday`s shooting attack in Hebron Hills
    07:54 Police gather saliva samples from prisoners for national DNA bank
    Previous Editions
    Special Offers
    Advertisement
    Inbal Jerusalem Hotel
    Unbeatable rates at the Finest hotel in Jerusalem
    Invest in Macedonia
    New Business Heaven in Europe
    Long-term Israel programs
    MASA is your gateway. More programs. More grants.
    Eldan Rent a Car
    Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
    Dead Sea Salt
    Beauty and skin care from the Dead Sea. Coupon code HAARETZ for 10% off!
    Holiday Inn and Crown Plaza Israel
    Lowest internet rate Guaranteed at ichotelsgroup.com !
    Home| TV| Print Edition| Diplomacy| Opinion| Arts & Leisure| Sports| Jewish World| Underground| Site rules|
    © Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved