The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW STATE IS HANDLING BACKLOG OF RAPE TEST KITS

Goal is to clear out the old rape kits by the first of next year.

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion’s crime lab is making progress in its years-long slog through thousands of backlogged sexual assault evidence packages.

The GBI Division of Forensic Science’s goal is to clear out the old rape kits by the first of next year, freeing it to then concentrat­e on new criminal cases coming in for analysis.

“We see a light at the end of the tunnel,” said GBI Director Vernon Keenan.

The push to test a backlog of almost 10,000 sexual assault kits began after 1,351 untested rape kits were discovered in storage in 2015 at Grady Memorial Hospital, apparently forgotten.

The 2016 Legislatur­eresponded by passing a law requiring all Geor- gia law enforcemen­t agencies to send stored rape kits to the GBI headquarte­rs in Decatur for testing. Eventually those numbered 2,476, which was in addition to the old evidence packages from Grady.

The lab already had more than 5,400 evidence kits from sex crimes prior to 1999 that had not been processed because the technology did not exist at the time.

Moreover, the lab was logging

in an average of 250 new sexual assault kits each month.

“We’re in this position because the system failed, but I am encouraged we’ve taken action to fix it and we’re making progress. But it never should have happened in the first place,” said state Rep. Scott Holcomb, D-Atlanta, one of the sponsors of the 2016 legislatio­n.

The backlog has since been cut by more than twothirds and now stands at less than 2,900. The GBI has contracted with an outside lab to process the older cases while the state’s 50 scientists and technician­s focus on new cases.

“I’m pleased, but when there is still a third outstandin­g it’s hard to jump up and down with joy,” said state Sen. Elena Parent, D-Atlanta, one of the sponsors of the legislatio­n that required law enforcemen­t to submit rape kits to the GBI.

GBI spokesman Bahan Rich said some, but not all, the analysis of the old rape kits have resulted in matches to entries already in the national Combined DNA Index System (CODIS).

In most instances, there is not enough DNA to provide a profile suitable for submitting to CODIS. In many instances, there is no match found in CODIS. And in some instances, suspects had already been identified and prosecuted.

There were 241 CODIS “hits” to evidence processed since the program began almost two years ago.

Of those 241, charges are pending in 112 and police are looking for the victims in eight.

“We had more CODIS matches than we anticipate­d and ... that’s been great for investigat­ions,” Keenan said.

“What’s disappoint­ing,” he said, “is the number of victims that do not want their cases to go forward.”

According to GBI data, 73 victims from those 241 CODIS hits didn’t want their cases investigat­ed or would not cooperate.

“A victim reaches a certain point ... where they want to go on with their lives and not dwell on things that happened in the past,” Keenan said. “That’s why it’s important that cases not be warehoused, that there be an analysis.”

Last fall the state activated a website on which the victims in old sexual assault cases can log their preference­s for how they want to proceed if there is a CODIS match. They don’t necessaril­y have to wait for law enforcemen­t or prosecutor­s to reach out to them, Holcomb said.

“It’s to open the line of communicat­ions between (sexual assault) survivors and law enforcemen­t and to give them informatio­n about their kits,” Holcomb said. “A lot of these victims have waited a very, very long time to receive justice. Now that these kits have been tested, (it) should lead to the identifica­tion of the perpetrato­r.”

The number of victims who have accessed the site was not available.

So the slog continues. Once the outside lab finishes testing the 448 sexual assault kits that remain from the huge batch sent to the GBI in 2016, that contractor will then begin processing pre1999 rape kits that local law enforcemen­t wants analyzed. (Although there are 5,400 kits from sex crimes prior to 1999, local law enforcemen­t has specified roughly 860 that it wants tested.)

“There is still a long way to go,” Parent said.

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