The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GBI: 4,200 untested rape kits analyzed

New Ga. law prompted agencies to act, finding justice for some victims.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion has tallied untested evidence from more than 4,200 suspected sexual assaults that had never been analyzed by authoritie­s for DNA matches, according to a report released this month by the agency. And roughly 5,400 other rape kits submitted more than a decade ago could be re-examined by state investigat­ors.

The GBI said it had collected 3,006 unsubmitte­d kits from across the state since April 26 and that forensics investigat­ors have completed testing on an additional 1,572 kits over the past seven months, including many received before April. That includes evidence from at least 14 sexual assault kits long stored at Atlanta hospitals for children that matched DNA samples that were collected from convicted criminals and stored in a national database.

The report also said an additional 5,411 rape kits that the agency received before 1999, which at the time couldn’t be tested, will be “researched to determine if DNA analysis is needed” using modern technology.

The scrutiny was prompted by a new state law that passed in the final minutes of this year’s legislativ­e session to set deadlines for when rape kits must be sent to the state’s forensic lab in Decatur. While lawmakers did not set aside funding to cover the cost of testing, Georgia received a $2 million grant from a New York agency, and the GBI said in the annual report that about 50 cases each month are outsourced.

“I’m horrified that there are so many victims who are waiting for justice,” said state Rep. Scott Holcomb, who along with state Sen. Elena Parent was a sponsor of the measure. “But I’m encouraged that cases are now moving forward. Much more work needs to be done.”

The law was passed in the wake of a 2015 Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on report that found Grady Memorial Hospital had stored in filing cabinets as many as 1,500 rape kits and never told police about them. Holcomb has said he plans to introduce legislatio­n that would make it easier to notify victims that their cases are now moving through the criminal justice system.

 ?? KENT D. JOHNSON / AJC ?? Rape kits in the vault at the GBI. After state law changed July 1 to require hospitals and law enforcemen­t agencies to account for kits they still had, the GBI got a stunning call from Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. There were 205 child rape kits...
KENT D. JOHNSON / AJC Rape kits in the vault at the GBI. After state law changed July 1 to require hospitals and law enforcemen­t agencies to account for kits they still had, the GBI got a stunning call from Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. There were 205 child rape kits...

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