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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Senate passes bill aiming to reduce rape kit backlog

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Senator Thom Tillis | Senator Thom Tillis Official photo

Senator Thom Tillis | Senator Thom Tillis Official photo

The U.S. Senate recently passed the Debbie Smith Act, legislation aimed at providing state and local law enforcement agencies with resources to complete forensic analyses of crime scenes and untested rape kits. The legislation now heads to the President’s desk to be signed into law.

“Victims of these heinous crimes deserve justice and Congress should do everything we can to put the perpetrators behind bars,” said Senator Tillis. “I am proud the Debbie Smith Act passed the Senate and look forward to the bill being signed into law.”

The Debbie Smith Act was originally signed into law in 2004 to provide local and state crime laboratories with resources to end the backlog of untested DNA evidence from unsolved crimes, analyze DNA samples, and increase the capacity to process DNA in order to guard against future backlogs. Since it became law, more than 860,000 DNA cases have been processed.

In addition to crime scene evidence, Debbie Smith funds are also utilized to process offender DNA samples to ensure evidence from unsolved crimes can be matched against a database of known offenders, similar to criminal fingerprint databases.

This legislation is endorsed by Debbie Smith, the Fraternal Order of Police, Major Cities Chiefs Association, Major County Sheriffs of America, National District Attorneys Association, Consortium of Forensic Science Organizations, Rape Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN), and Joyful Heart Foundation.

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