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SFPD put rape victims’ DNA into database used to find criminals, DA alleges

San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin standing and speaking into a microphone.

Enlarge / San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin speaks at a press conference in protest of Mayor London Breed’s plan for more policing and enforcement of laws that could affect drug users in the Tenderloin neighborhood on Monday, Dec. 20, 2021. (credit: Getty Images | San Francisco Chronicle)

The San Francisco Police Department’s crime lab has been checking DNA collected from sexual assault victims to determine whether any of the victims committed a crime, according to District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who called for an immediate end to the alleged practice.

“The crime lab attempts to identify crime suspects by searching a database of DNA evidence that contains DNA collected from rape and sexual assault victims,” Boudin’s office said in a press release yesterday. Boudin’s release denounced the alleged “practice of using rape and sexual assault victims’ DNA to attempt to subsequently incriminate them.”

“Boudin said his office was made aware of the purported practice last week, after a woman’s DNA collected years ago as part of a rape exam was used to link her to a recent property crime,” the San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday. The woman “was recently arrested on suspicion of a felony property crime, with police identifying her based on the rape-kit evidence she gave as a victim, Boudin said.” That was the only example provided, and Boudin gave few details about the case to protect the woman’s privacy. But the database may include “thousands of victims’ DNA profiles, with entries over ‘many, many years,’ Boudin said,” according to the Chronicle.

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