Branstad Signs Bill Widening DNA Sampling to Misdemeanor Cases
By AP,
Associated Press
| 05. 16. 2013
DES MOINES (AP) — People convicted of certain aggravated misdemeanors in Iowa now will be required to submit DNA samples.
Gov. Terry Branstad signed into law on Wednesday afternoon a measure that expands the collection of DNA samples beyond felony convictions and sex offenses.
“It builds on the current success of our DNA program by using modern technology to help solve and prevent crimes,” Branstad said. “Law enforcement will be able to identify criminals quickly and get them off the streets sooner and convict them with greater accuracy.”
Under the law, adults convicted of such crimes as aggravated misdemeanor assault and theft will submit a DNA sample. Previously, only convicted felons and sexual offenders were required to submit samples. The new law doesn't apply to convictions that happened before its passage.
Deferred judgment cases and misdemeanors related to hazardous waste, agricultural production and gambling are exempt from the DNA requirement. Traffic offenses are also exempt unless a person has three operating while intoxicated convictions in 12 years.
Samples will be added to the federal DNA database, called the National DNA...
Related Articles
Sheep have been domesticated for roughly 12,000 years. Sheep have also been cloned since 1996; Dolly (pictured) was the first mammal to suffer that indignity. But this news was featured in the March 14 issue of Business Insider:
Montana rancher paid $4,200 to clone a dead sheep and launched a farm of super hybrids worth up to $550,000
Some people — not just Montanans but Texans too and probably others — pay to indulge in “captive hunting,” and large...
By Nada Hassanein, New Jersey Monitor | 03.14.2024
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration late last year approved two breakthrough gene therapies for sickle cell disease patients. Now a new federal program seeks to make these life-changing treatments available to patients with low incomes — and it could...
By Liz Baker, Debbie Elliott, and Susanna Capelouto, NPR | 03.06.2024
The Alabama State Legislature passed a bill Wednesday night granting civil and criminal immunity for in vitro fertilization service providers and receivers.
Republican Governor Kay Ivey signed the bill into law within an hour of it passing the Alabama...
By Daniel Gilbert, The Washington Post | 03.07.2024
Vitaly Kushnir’s fertility clinic offers to screen an embryo to predict a baby’s sex, but the service can lead to ethically murky territory, like when a couple wanted it so their first child could be a boy.
But the couple...