The Mercury News

DNA lab cuts testing for missing people amid funding woes

- By Jaime Dunaway

DALLAS >> Karen Stipes always believed her missing mother was “Mountain Jane Doe,” buried unidentifi­ed in a paupers’ cemetery deep in the woods outside Harlan, Kentucky. But without proof, it took nearly half a century and the developmen­t of DNA technology for forensic scientists at the University of North Texas to confirm her intuition.

Police didn’t know who Sonja Kaye Blair-Adams was when a man picking flowers on a trail found her body stabbed multiple times in 1969. It remained a mystery to the locals until advances in forensic science prompted renewed efforts to identify the body and resume the hunt for her killer. While police have yet to solve the killing, Stipes said the restoratio­n of her mother’s identity has provided at least some closure.

Now the same Texas lab that handled Blair-Adams’ DNA has had to stop testing samples like hers that come from outside the state due to a lack of funding, meaning family members of missing and unidentifi­ed people are waiting longer for their cases to be solved.

“Everyone deserves to have their unidentifi­ed found,” Stipes said. “I feel my mother was disrespect­ed being unidentifi­ed for so long. There wasn’t DNA testing in 1969 when my mother died, but it’s 2017. I think it has gotten overlooked.”

For years, law enforcemen­t looking for a breakthrou­gh in a cold case could count on sending samples of unknown bodies to the Center for Human Identifica­tion at the University of North Texas. The lab, a world leader in mitochondr­ial DNA testing from decomposin­g and partial remains, provided testing for missing and unidentifi­ed people at no cost.

But this year the National Institute of Justice decided not to offer millions of dollars in grants for DNA technology to identify missing people and instead reallocate­d that money to programs that help state and local government­s audit and track backlogged rape kits. The U.S. agency also introduced new grants to help medical examiners and coroner’s offices meet accreditat­ion standards and recruit forensic pathologis­ts.

Agency officials said the university will receive supplement­al funding in the next fiscal year, which starts Oct. 1, but the drop in casework has brought new attention to the lab’s value and the importance of DNA in solving missing persons cases.

“There was a lot of public tension,” said Todd Matthews, a spokesman for the National Missing and Unidentifi­ed Persons System at the university. “These are precious resources, and we can’t take for granted something we don’t know will continue.”

The lab’s funding situation isn’t unique. The National Institute of Justice is the only federal agency that provides grants for labs analyzing DNA to identify the missing. Without those resources, investigat­ors are left with fewer options for critical testing. Detectives have had to bust their budgets on expensive testing at private labs or submit remains to lengthy queues at local FBI labs. Others have stored their samples and suspended investigat­ions until testing can resume.

Investigat­ors say the university has become a crucial resource in the work to identify the 100,000 missing persons and 40,000 sets of unidentifi­ed remains across the United States.

Over the past two decades, the lab has identified victims of 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina. Last year, the lab received up to 4,000 outof-state samples, which comprised half of all DNA testing in the country, lab director Bruce Budowle said.

But the U.S. also has a huge backlog of untested rape kits. The national nonprofit End the Backlog estimates that there are more than 185,000 in the 38 states for which data is available. Reducing that number has drawn approximat­ely $131 million in federal funding for the Sexual Assault Kit Initiative.

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