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niyad

(113,315 posts)
Thu Sep 10, 2015, 09:43 PM Sep 2015

Lawmakers Pledge $80 Million to Eliminate Rape Kit Backlogs Nationwide

(and yet, in florida, they are committing $300,000 to study (not test) the backlogged rape kits, to see how many there are. this could possibly be finished by next year)


Lawmakers Pledge $80 Million to Eliminate Rape Kit Backlogs Nationwide

On Thursday, Vice President Joe Biden, together with US Attorney General Loretta Lynch and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, announced efforts to process some 70,000 untested rape kits, committing nearly $80 million to their resolution.




During a press conference held at New York City’s medical examiner’s office, Biden and Lynch underscored the importance of clearing the national backlog, pledging $41 million of federal funds to test 13,500 kits in 20 jurisdictions. Vance, upholding a promise made last fall, will apportion $38 million in forfeiture funds and provide grants of up to $2 million to examine 56,000 rape kits in 32 agencies across the country.

Conservative estimates suggest approximately 400,000 rape kits sit untested in crime labs nationwide. At $1,000 per kit analysis, some police departments resist addressing their cities’ backlogs, citing lack of funds. The benefits of testing rape kits are undeniable. Rape kits afford prosecutors the opportunity to indict “John Doe”s, securing their DNA in a national database and effectively stopping the clock on the statute of limitations imposed on sexual assault cases. Moreover, given an estimated 90 to 95 percent of rapes are committed by serial rapists, rape kits allow law enforcement to prosecute repeat offenders before they rape again.

Efforts to eliminate the backlog have already yielded results in cities nationwide. In Detroit, for example, the analysis of 10,000 previously untested rape kits exposed 487 serial rapists in at large in several states. Los Angeles has eliminated their backlog entirely with grant assistance and now processes rape kits within three months of receipt.

“The bottom line is simple,” said Biden, who authored and spearheaded passage of the VAWA law and has long championed programs to end violence against women, “f we’re able to test these kits, more crimes could be solved and more women can live with the comfort of knowing her rapist will not return.”

http://feminist.org/blog/index.php/2015/09/10/lawmakers-pledge-80-million-to-eliminate-rape-kit-backlogs-nationwide/

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yeoman6987

(14,449 posts)
1. 1,000 dollars for one test?
Thu Sep 10, 2015, 10:09 PM
Sep 2015

The government should get a better deal then that. Why not have a government office perform them then they will be free. Ugh!

niyad

(113,315 posts)
2. I have been trying to figure out why these essential pieces of evidence are so damned expensive
Thu Sep 10, 2015, 10:13 PM
Sep 2015

to test. can someone explain this to me?

4lbs

(6,858 posts)
4. Reading up on what is exactly in a "rape kit", it seems to involve the collection of as much as
Thu Sep 10, 2015, 10:55 PM
Sep 2015

six pieces of evidence.

1.) Vaginal/Anal swab

2.) Blood evidence

3.) Skin cell evidence

4.) Hair follicle evidence

5.) Clothes

6.) Various other fibers


Each item would need a separate test. Thus, up to 6 tests and the $1000 to perform them all.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape_kit

niyad

(113,315 posts)
5. I would really like to see a breakdown of the cost of each test, vs. the cost of collecting
Fri Sep 11, 2015, 07:23 PM
Sep 2015

evidence in, say, murder cases.

4lbs

(6,858 posts)
7. According to the Innocence Project (New Orleans branch), it is thousands of dollars.
Fri Sep 11, 2015, 08:24 PM
Sep 2015
http://www.ip-no.org/faq


How much does a DNA test cost?

The cost is over $1,000 for a single DNA test and many of our cases involve multiple rounds of testing on several different items of evidence. When IPNO pays for testing at private labs, the average total cost of testing in cases is $8,500. When testing is done by government labs, as it is in some of our cases, there is generally no cost to us.

niyad

(113,315 posts)
3. interesting information:
Thu Sep 10, 2015, 10:15 PM
Sep 2015

. . . .

Another reason behind the backlog is detective discretion. In the majority of jurisdictions, the decision whether to send a rape kit for testing rests solely within the discretion of the officer assigned to the case. Several factors can affect the officer’s decision, including:

Whether the department prioritizes sexual assaults. Law enforcement agencies often fail to dedicate the time and resources that other crimes receive to sexual assault cases. More than with any other crime, members of law enforcement frequently disbelieve or even blame victims of sexual assault rather than focusing on bringing the perpetrator to justice.

- See more at: http://www.endthebacklog.org/backlog/why-backlog-exists#sthash.BUE60oio.dpuf

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