1 / 16

CRIMINAL LAW (FORENSIC PROCEDURES) AMENDMENT BILL [B 2-2009]: ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION AND

CRIMINAL LAW (FORENSIC PROCEDURES) AMENDMENT BILL [B 2-2009]: ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION AND COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS. 6 October 2009 Sueanne S. Isaac. PART 1: ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION. Constitutional Issues Possible infringement of rights including

len-harmon
Download Presentation

CRIMINAL LAW (FORENSIC PROCEDURES) AMENDMENT BILL [B 2-2009]: ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION AND

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CRIMINAL LAW (FORENSIC PROCEDURES) AMENDMENT BILL [B 2-2009]: ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION AND COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 6 October 2009 Sueanne S. Isaac

  2. PART 1: ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION

  3. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION • Constitutional Issues • Possible infringement of rights including - Equality (s9) - Privacy (s14) - Human Dignity (s10) - Bodily Integrity (s12) - Children (s28) - Accused (s35)

  4. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION • Difference between finger-prints and DNA samples - finger-print two-dimensional image on raised portion of epidermis - DNA obtained from blood or tissue sample • Fingerprint • DNA Structure

  5. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION 3. The taking of finger-print and DNA samples for every offence - No differentiation between serious and minor offences. 4. Retention for five years of finger-prints, DNA samples, DNA profiles, photographic images and body-prints - Samples of accused people retained for five years even if charges against when withdrawn or they are acquitted. 5. Retention of finger-prints, DNA samples, DNA profiles, photographic images and body-prints of arrested people - DNA samples and finger-prints are taken from all arrested people.

  6. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION 6. Destruction of finger-prints, DNA samples and profiles of a person who was not convicted of a crime - The information is destroyed after 5 years. 7. Mandatory retention of DNA samples - Capacity issues 8. Child Offenders - Treated the same as adults. - Child Justice Act

  7. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION 9. Body-prints - Definition restrictive? 10. Using force to obtain evidence - Use of force against all people and not just accused people 11. Volunteers - Consent cannot be withdrawn

  8. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION 12. Expungement - No expungement procedure provided in the Bill. 13. Matches of the DNA Database vs. actual convictions - A match of a crime scene sample with a profile on the database does not mean that the perpetrator has been identified. 14. Extending the Database to every citizen - Constitutional and capacity issues.

  9. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION 15. Implementation Plan - Capacity of SAPS to deal with the duties imposed by the Bill. 16. Cost Implications - Is the Bill sufficiently funded? 17. Training of SAPS officials - Training plan

  10. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION 18. Regulations to be approved by Parliament vs. National Instructions issued by the National Commissioner - Should there be regulations which are approved by Parliament? 19. Sharing of information with foreign law enforcement agencies - Protection of information. 20. Safeguards and quality assurance - Independent advisory panel?

  11. PART 2: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS

  12. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS • From whom must a sample be taken? - UK: Arrested and convicted people - USA: Arrested and convicted people - Canada: On obtaining a DNA warrant 2. The retention of DNA profiles from a convicted person - UK: Profiles of all convicted people stored indefinitely. - USA: Profiles people convicted of federal crimes. 47 States store profiles of offenders convicted of felonies. 37 States store profiles of offenders convicted of certain sex crime misdemeanours 4 States for wider list of misdemeanours.

  13. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 3. Retention of DNA samples - USA: Depends of the State. - UK: Indefinite retention. • Marper judgment - EU States: No or limited retention - Canada: No retention • Retention of DNA profiles of a person who was not convicted of an offence - UK: Indefinite retention of arrestee profiles - USA: Retention with expungement clause - EU States: No or limited retention

  14. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 5. Children - USA: 32 States retain profiles of juvenile convicts - UK: Profiles and samples retained indefinitely 6. Expungement of Records - USA: Detailed expungement procedure at federal level and 38 states have expungement procedure - UK: No expungement. Considering automatic destruction of profiles after period of time and early deletion of records in specified cases. (eg. unlawful arrest and no offence committed)

  15. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS • 7. Volunteers • - UK: Indefinite retention. Proposal not to include volunteers on • the database. • - Canada: Immediate destruction if person excluded as a suspect • 8. Foreign access to DNA profiles • - UK: Concerns over data protection. Recommended strict • guidelines. • - EU: Stringent privacy regulations. • DNA Databanks • - USA: DNA databases at local, state and federal level. NDIS is the • federal database run by the FBI using CODIS software programme. • - Canada: Has a crime scene index and convicted offenders index. .

  16. CONCLUSION • In summary the Committee may consider the following issues: • 1. the constitutionality of the Bill • 2. the implementation of the Bill • 3. the cost implications of the Bill. .

More Related