Los Angeles County Deserves
State-Of-The-Art Crime Lab
By District Attorney
Steve Cooley
Thousands of rapes and sexual assaults against women remain unsolved in
Los Angeles because the city and county crime labs aren’t equipped to
handle the amazing advances in DNA testing. That means the victims of these
heinous crimes must suffer in silence and live in fear until police get a
break in the case. Only after a suspect is identified and the case is
brought to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office for
prosecution is a DNA test completed.
Science isn’t the issue. Each week in Great Britain, forensic
investigators are solving 300 "cold cases," everything from auto
theft to assaults in cases previously without suspects. With vision and
proper planning, Britain built sophisticated crime labs and created a
national DNA database and began doing "cold hits," checking every
DNA sample taken at crime scenes against their databases of felons and
parolees to find matches.
If we had a similar system in Los Angeles County, we could achieve the
same impressive results. Instead, several hundred homicides and more than
1,000 sexual assault cases remain unsolved because of a backlog in DNA
testing at the Sheriff’s Department’s crime lab alone, frustrating
independent police departments throughout the county and needlessly
jeopardizing public safety.
Thanks to Sheriff Lee Baca’s initiative in securing funding and Gov.
Gray Davis’ response to public safety, Los Angeles County now has an
historic opportunity to build a state-of-the-art crime lab at California
State University, Los Angeles.
Unfortunately, crime fighting will not make a quantum leap forward unless
the proposed $96 million Regional Forensic Crime Lab is transformed into a
truly visionary and collaborative project.
Sheriff Baca and LAPD Chief Bernard Parks should strive to open the
process to the community for public discussion. Key crime lab customers,
such as the District Attorney’s Office, municipal prosecutors and the 46
police agencies serving nearly one-third of the county’s residents must be
meaningfully included in determining the final scope of any new county crime
lab.
Mistrust of the criminal justice system is at an all-time high. To help
restore the public’s faith in the justice system, all agencies that
gather, evaluate and present evidence must establish uniform protocols and
procedures. A single set of benchmarks in the gathering, analysis and
presentation of forensic and scientific evidence is critical.
For 30 years, the two public crime labs have been treated like neglected
stepchildren. There has not been the commitment to hire and train enough
criminalists, replace aging equipment
or add space to protect evidence. A 1997 Grand Jury report on the crime labs
operated by the Sheriff’s Department and the Los Angeles Police Department
noted that each lab received a fraction of the budget they requested each
year.
Citing just one example of inadequate funding, the report said the city
approved spending $108,000 to buy one piece of replacement equipment for the
LAPD’s lab in the 1996-97 budget, even though the lab requested 300 pieces
of new and replacement equipment over a 5-year period estimated to cost $3.8
million.
Presently, the LAPD lab has two DNA experts to do testing while the
Sheriff’s lab has eight, leaving both labs overwhelmed with cases and
understaffed to search DNA state and national databases similar to British
system. To do adequate "cold case" testing in addition to the
current trial case work, each lab needs 40 DNA experts today.
Most importantly, the process to develop a new crime lab needs public
scrutiny as well as public input. Historic shortcomings and failures of each
lab should be acknowledged and evaluated openly and honestly.
We should be discussing the four or five critical functions to be
included at the Cal State L.A. site. Function and operation should dictate
design. To determine this, input is vital from the public, women’s
advocacy groups and others in the criminal justice system dependent on a
crime lab’s product.
A state-of-the-art DNA center is also the first line of defense in
clearing people wrongly accused and ensuring there is justice for all.
A crime lab with focused objectives and appropriate priorities will
propel every law enforcement agency in Los Angeles County into the 21st
century in forensic science. This county’s 9 million residents could feel
more secure in their homes and communities knowing their law enforcement and
prosecutorial agencies have the tools and technology to solve "cold
crimes" through DNA testing and national DNA databanks.
In short, with enough DNA experts working in a state-of-the art crime
lab, we can discover the identity of predators, rapists and murderers and
put them behind bars.
The stakes in Los Angeles County are enormous. Let’s get it right this
time.
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Site updated:
01 Feb 2006
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