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The Rape Kit Controversy
In cities across the country, hundreds of thousands of rape kits are sitting untested in police department evidence rooms. These kits contain DNA that could lead to the arrest of rapists and free wrongly convicted men. Some of these kits have gone untested for more than a decade due to a lack of funding.
A rape kit contains the evidence that is generally collected at a hospital after a woman is raped. Rape is one crime where the culprit leaves evidence behind such as stained clothing, skin from underneath fingernails, hairs and semen. Collecting this evidence can be a very invasive process for women. But often times, this is where the investigation stops. Police departments say they can't afford $500$1000 per test to extract the DNA and enter it into the national database.
Howard Safir, former Police Commissioner of New York City, found there were 16,000 untested kits in storage when he was in office. Now a consultant for a DNA testing lab, Howard estimates there are 300,000500,000 untested kits across the country. Howard says, "Not testing a woman's kit is like telling her 'You are not worth $500.'"
To investigate this problem further, ABC's 20/20 paid the police department of Baltimore half of the money needed to test 50 rape kits. Their investigation solved five major crime cases and exonerated a wrongfully imprisoned man. Brian Ross, Chief Investigative Correspondent for ABC News, says that in Baltimore alone, it would take an estimated $4.5 million dollars to process their backlog of rape kits.
"The great journalist H.L. Mencken said that an investigative reporter is a great one if he either puts somebody in jail or gets someone out. For the first time in a story I've done, this did both ...and it helped expose a national problem that exists in virtually every city and state in the country," says Brian. Who Is Responsible for Testing the Kits? The police are not the negligent party in these situations; they simply don't have the money needed for testing. Howard Safir explains, "For the price of one B-1 Bomber we could [test] all of the rape kits and convicted offenders." By law convicted rapists are supposed to have their DNA samples analyzed. Each analysis costs $50 and is entered into the national database. This helps in the conviction process using rape kits. One million of these samples are sitting out there unanalyzed. Finding a Solution
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