BBC Science Focus

FAMILY TREE FORENSICS

In the US, hundreds of long-forgotten cold cases are being reopened by detectives who mine new DNA databases for leads, but it seems time might be running out...

- by SIMON CROMPTON

Some people committed crimes years ago and thought they got away with their wrongdoing­s. But genetic genealogis­ts can use DNA data from family history sites to track them down.

“GENETIC GENEALOGIS­TS THEN REVERSE-ENGINEERED A FAMILY TREE, JOINING THE DOTS BETWEEN THE CRIME SCENE DNA AND RELATIVES”

When she answers my call, Paula Armentrout is buzzing with the news that’s just come through. Her company’s DNA analysis and genetic genealogy service has just led to the arrest of a man for two murders that happened four years ago. It’s the 101st case of serious crime solved as result of genetic detective work by Parabon NanoLabs. The service was launched just two years ago, in May 2018.

The Cincinnati man who’s been arrested beat a mother and son to death in their home in 2016. He might have thought he’d got away with it, as at the time of the initial investigat­ion, the DNA sample found at the crime scene matched nothing on the police databases. The case went cold.

But Virginia-based Parabon provided a new analysis of the DNA sample, which allowed it to be compared with hundreds of thousands of other DNA samples – not on police databases but on online genealogy services by members of the public wanting to find relatives through genetic similariti­es. Just as in 100 other cases, the analysis revealed people related to the suspect, some distantly. Parabon’s genetic genealogis­ts then reverse-engineered a family tree, joining the dots between the crime scene DNA and relatives using official birth, death and marriage records and obituaries, to produce a list of leads and potential suspects for whom the time, the place and the DNA fitted.

COLD CASES

In case 101, the process led to 51-year-old Jonathan Hurst. Mobile phone records confirmed that Hurst was in the area of the crime scene on the day of the murders. Police then tested his DNA and confirmed a match to the crime scene DNA.

“In this case, we’ve been assisting law enforcemen­t agencies as needed for around a year and a half,” says Armentrout, Parabon’s vice president. “There are a lot of our cases in that stage, with agencies investigat­ing leads we’ve generated or following up recommenda­tions that we’ve given them from our genealogic­al perspectiv­e.”

Genetic genealogy has suddenly become big in United States law enforcemen­t. The explosion began in April 2018, when California law authoritie­s announced the identifica­tion and arrest of the suspected Golden State Killer, responsibl­e for 12 killings, 51 rapes, and more than 120 burglaries in California between 1974 and 1986. Police had drafted in the help of genetic genealogis­ts, who pointed to former police officer Joseph James DeAngelo after they had uploaded their new analysis of his DNA data to an

open-source genealogy service called GEDmatch and compared it with the DNA records of hundreds of thousands of people who wanted to research their family tree.

Just one month after the Golden State Killer announceme­nt, DNA engineerin­g company Parabon launched its genetic genealogy service – also using GEDmatch – and unsolved violent crime cases came flooding in from police department­s.

Parabon analyses DNA in a more detailed way than law enforcemen­t DNA databases. It examines hundreds of thousands of DNA loci via a technique called ‘single nucleotide polymorphi­sm analysis’ (SNP) rather than the 13 to 17 loci of traditiona­l police ‘short tandem repeat’ (STR) techniques (see box, right). DNA ancestry websites like GED also analyse DNA using SNP.

To date, Parabon has worked on 450 cases, with the average case being 25 years old. The company also takes on current cases where there’s an urgent need for leads. In 2018 they took on the case of a man who had raped a 79-year-old woman in Utah. Parabon’s chief genetic genealogis­t CeCe Moore knew that narrowing down suspects using family trees might be the only means of preventing further crimes.

“They desperatel­y wanted to solve this case before he attacked another woman or he came back to the victim’s home again. She was petrified, couldn’t sleep at night, afraid he would come back and finish the job. So that was a very high pressure case.” The perpetrato­r was arrested in July 2018, just three months after the crime.

Now competitio­n for genetic genealogy business is growing. In February last year, Bode Technology joined Parabon in offering the service to law enforcemen­t, followed by Verogen Inc in December (when it also acquired GEDmatch). But Parabon claims no one offers a complete service like theirs, combining genealogy with a ‘snapshot’ genetic phenotypin­g service. This genetic phenotypin­g creates CGI images of suspects’ faces from analysis of key loci in their DNA. Parabon has sold this service to police forces in 13 countries.

But the rush to find new ways of catching criminals through detailed SNP DNA analysis is controvers­ial. Rumblings started as soon as details of the Golden State Killer capture emerged. Was it right that people who submitted their personal informatio­n for the purpose of finding relatives should have their families investigat­ed for crimes? Some people involved in subsequent cases have complained about feeling misled that their DNA has been used to build cases against relatives.

Crime, science and ethics academics have also voiced their worries. Writing in the journal Genetics In Medicine, Dr Caitlin

“DNA PHENOTYPIN­G HIGHLIGHTS HOW MUCH INFORMATIO­N IS CONTAINED IN OUR GENETIC DATA. THIS INCLUDES INFO ABOUT OUR PREDISPOSI­TION TO DISEASE AND MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS”

Curtis, genomic research fellow at the University of Queensland, said that the growth of both forensic genetic genealogy and DNA phenotypin­g highlights the need for greater protection of genetic data. “Police genealogy shows how one person’s decision about their genetic data can impact not only close relatives, but distant ones,” says Curtis. “DNA phenotypin­g highlights how much sensitive informatio­n is contained in our genetic data.” This includes informatio­n about our predisposi­tion to disease and mental health problems, as well as what we look like.

PRIVACY CONCERNS

Some of the concern has dampened down as genealogy websites have made it clearer whether or not they are used in law enforcemen­t programmes, and now make it necessary for users to ‘opt in’ if their DNA is to be used forensical­ly. Parabon says it only uploads samples to GEDmatch and now another company called FamilyTree­DNA. Other ancestry search companies, such as Ancestry.com and 23andme, do not allow access for crime-solving.

Moore, who was a well-known ancestry detective in the US before she developed forensic genetic genealogy techniques with Parabon, also had early concerns about using DNA designated for family history work for crime-solving.

Now her concern is that new privacy requiremen­ts are shrinking the DNA pool that crime samples can be compared against. Last year, GEDmatch opted its entire database out of law enforcemen­t matching, and required each person using the service to actively opt in. The result is that Parabon now has just 200,000 people

to compare against on GEDmatch, compared with 1,000,000 in 2018. “It’s now much more difficult to solve these cases and narrow them down as specifical­ly as we used to,” she says. “We don’t have enough data, which means a lot more work has to go into it.” Investigat­ors may need to ask certain lines of descendant­s for DNA samples.

There are other limitation­s that may restrict expansion. Those who submit DNA to research their ancestry tend to be of European extraction – standing in the way of growth in many countries. Data protection laws in Europe are generally tighter than the United States. And some experts believe there is simply no need for genetic genealogy in countries that operate an effective crime database.

Denise Syndercomb­e Court, professor of forensic genetics at King’s College London, says that the UK hasn’t gone down the genetic genealogy route, partly because it already has a database that represents a more relevant population. The UK National Criminal Intelligen­ce DNA Database, 25 years old this year, holds informatio­n on around 10 per cent of the UK population at any one time – because it includes DNA data on crime suspects as well as those who have committed crimes.

According to Syndercomb­e Court, a complicate­d DNA analysis that can identify distant cousins isn’t required if your crime database is comprehens­ive enough. “The UK database contains informatio­n on one in eight males between the age of 15 and 45 to 50, so it’s very powerful,” she says. In the case of unsolved serious offences, DNA can be compared to this database and it is likely to pick up close relatives – parents, children, full siblings and sometimes half siblings and uncles.

“The problem in the United States is that they haven’t been putting their felons onto an identifiab­le DNA database. Most of these people could have been picked up many years ago if the United States had a proper governance structure. We have that, so my feeling is that the number of cases it would be useful for in the UK would be very limited.”

“THE UK NATIONAL CRIMINAL INTELLIGEN­CE DNA DATABASE, 25 YEARS OLD THIS YEAR, HOLDS INFORMATIO­N ON AROUND 10 PER CENT OF THE UK POPULATION AT ANY ONE TIME”

 ??  ?? ABOVE CeCe Moore (second from left) and the Parabon team
ABOVE CeCe Moore (second from left) and the Parabon team
 ??  ?? In 2018, informatio­n obtained from genetic genealogy sites allowed police to finally track down the suspected Golden State Killer, former police officer Joseph James DeAngelo (pictured). He’d carried out a series of rapes and murders in the 1970s and 1980s, but had managed to avoid capture
ABOVE
In 2018, informatio­n obtained from genetic genealogy sites allowed police to finally track down the suspected Golden State Killer, former police officer Joseph James DeAngelo (pictured). He’d carried out a series of rapes and murders in the 1970s and 1980s, but had managed to avoid capture ABOVE

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