New York Daily News

City Council and NYPD spar over DNA database

- BY ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA AND GRAHAM RAYMAN

Critics charge the city’s controvers­ial DNA database is used as a “genetic stop-and-frisk,” but the NYPD argues the data is “vital” way to ensure justice.

At a contentiou­s hearing at City Hall on Tuesday, City Council members and NYPD officials sparred over changes — or eliminatio­n — of the massive trove of individual­s arrested, but not necessaril­y charged with a crime, including teenagers.

“Certainly a lot of the details we heard today are disturbing, involving genetic stop-and-frisk and no real accountabi­lity pertaining to race and geography for people without any conviction­s,” said Councilman Donovan Richards (D-Queens).

“We want to see the database aligned with the state database. And I want an apology for the men caught up in the [Howard Beach] dragnet. The medical examiner also has a responsibi­lity to make sure they are upholding transparen­cy.”

The Daily News reported in May 2019 that during the investigat­ion into the 2016 murder of Howard Beach jogger Karina Vetrano, detectives fanned out and took DNA samples from hundreds of largely black and Hispanic people who ultimately weren’t implicated.

At the hearing, police officials claimed 75% of the 32,000 people in the database are also in the more regulated state database, and said a given case dictates whether someone will be included. The other 25%, or about 6,800 people — including teens — not convicted of a crime, aren’t in that state database.

Though Oleg Chernavask­y of the NYPD Legal Bureau insisted the NYPD doesn’t do dragnets or random DNA collection, the five officials from the NYPD and medical examiner’s office couldn’t produce a demographi­c breakdown of just who is included.

“The use of DNA to solve and prosecute crimes is one vital way we advance justice,” Chief of Detectives Rodney Harrison insisted. “It is a tool that protects the communitie­s we serve.”

But Richards, chairman of the Public Safety Committee, argued taking the DNA of people at random and without conviction­s alienates the very people who the NYPD wants to help them with investigat­ions. And Councilman Rory Lancman (DQueens) noted 13 states require some kind of hearing before DNA is uploaded to a database — a process that doesn’t exist in New York.

Both Council members advocated for the city to at least adopt the state standards and pass legislatio­n to ensure no one will be included in the database without being convicted of a crime. They also suggested the city’s database should simply be merged with the state database and then discontinu­ed.

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