The Palm Beach Post

DNA-sharing services and privacy

NEW YORK — The use of a genealogy website to track down a suspected California serial killer illustrate­s both the extraordin­ary power of DNA-sharing services and the broad privacy concerns that surround the fast-growing commercial market for genetic analy

- — Matt O’Brien and Malcolm Ritter

‘It’s been overwhelmi­ng’

The co-founder of GEDmatch said Friday that he is concerned about privacy after learning that law enforcemen­t used the site and insists that his company does not “hand out data.”

“This was done without our knowledge, and it’s been overwhelmi­ng,” Curtis Rogers said.

Authoritie­s have not publicly described details of the methods that led to the arrest of 72-year-old Joseph James DeAngelo, a former police officer. But some other researcher­s who use GEDmatch for a similar purpose told The Associated Press how it might have been done.

Colleen Fitzpatric­k and Margaret Press run the DNA Doe Project, a California-based nonprofit that uses DNA from unidentifi­ed bodies to look for relatives and learn the names of the dead. They suspect the authoritie­s used a method similar to their own.

Investigat­ors probably started with the complete DNA code from the killer. Then, after putting the data into a format that GEDmatch can read, they plugged it into the Florida-based site and asked it to look for matches, they said.

The site compares particular segments of genetic material, looking for similariti­es to other samples in its database. The degree of similarity can indicate how related two people are, finding ties as distant as fifth cousins, Fitzpatric­k and Press said.

Once the site has returned a list of matches and degree of similarity, more sleuthing begins.

People in the database may have listed their names or just their emails, which in turn might identify them if they’ve used the same one on other sites. More informatio­n can come from searches of public records, Facebook and especially obituaries, which list parents and other relatives.

Then a researcher can turn to online collection­s of family trees, like those on Ancestry.com. There, one might uncover many trees that include the apparent relatives found on GEDmatch. That allows the constructi­on of speculativ­e trees that include the mystery person, plus those apparent relatives, in an effort to find overlaps that

indicate common ancestors.

‘It’s part art and part science’

If common ancestors appear, lineage can be worked out in detail, up to the present day. Researches look for a spot that contains someone of the right geographic location and age to be the person under investigat­ion. “It’s part art and part science,” Press said.

To some, scouring this publicly shared data to track down the so-called Golden State Killer seems like a worthwhile cause. But for others it raises alarms.

De Simone said he has never used a DNA ancestry service.

“What’s especially troubling to me is that neither had DeAngelo,” he said. He compared the situation to Facebook’s data-protection scandal involving Cambridge Analytica because “it’s not only users that are caught up in this net, it’s also those with relationsh­ips to users. In this case, though, it’s not just networked relationsh­ips, it’s actual genetic relationsh­ips.”

The big commercial databases insist they have much stricter customer privacy practices than websites such as GEDmatch and don’t hand over data without a court order.

“As a private platform, we do not allow the comparison of genetic data processed by any third party to genetic profiles within our database. Further, we do not share customer data with any public databases or with entities that may increase the risk of law enforcemen­t access,” 23andMe spokesman Andy Kill said in an email.

It’s unclear whether the California case will affect customers’ trust in DNA services overall.

“These companies are saying that they’re different,” said Tiffany Li, a technology attorney and Yale Law School fellow. “I think what’s key is this open-source database is made up of data profiles that people mostly got from those private companies.”

Li said the demand for personal genetic informatio­n that helps uncover long-lost relatives and family background­s is high enough that this privacy “dust-up” will likely blow over. But, she said, it should serve as a warning for stewards of DNA databases to be more careful and more transparen­t about how data is used.

“They should at least try to do more to make people aware,” Li said. “The terms could be clearer. The companies could also decide to self-regulate before Congress gets to them and create data standards about the DNA they store.”

 ?? JASON HENRY / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Joseph James DeAngelo, who is suspected of being the Golden State Killer, is wheeled into the courtroom by a bailiff during his arraignmen­t hearing at the Sacramento County Sheriff’s office on Friday. To solve the decades-old serial rape and murder...
JASON HENRY / NEW YORK TIMES Joseph James DeAngelo, who is suspected of being the Golden State Killer, is wheeled into the courtroom by a bailiff during his arraignmen­t hearing at the Sacramento County Sheriff’s office on Friday. To solve the decades-old serial rape and murder...

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