The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Grady to turnover 1,000 rape kits

Hospital withheld evidence from police even when patient OK’d its release.

- By Willoughby Mariano wmariano@ajc.com

The state’s largest public hospital is releasing to law enforcemen­t more than 1,000 packages of sex crime evidence that have been locked away in file cabinets since 2000, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has learned.

An AJC investigat­ion in June found that 1,500 of these rape kits had piled up at Grady Memorial Hospital, in part because Grady failed to report many of these possible crimes to police. Medical staff at Grady, which is home to the sole rape crisis center for Fulton County’s nearly 1 million residents, collected samples of bodily fluids, hair and other evidence through special forensic exams that can be so invasive that they cause emotional trauma. Yet the kits were never tested for DNA, even when victims requested the evidence be shared with police.

Officials at the taxpayer-supported hospital initially acknowledg­ed that 130 of these kits belonged to victims who wanted them sent to police. The new number Grady provided to the AJC is nearly eight times that amount. A written statement Grady officials sent to the AJC did not give a reason for the abrupt and steep increase, clarify why they are not sending some 500 kits that remain in storage, or say if police had investigat­ed any of these cases. Hospital spokeswoma­n Lindsay Caulfield declined to make hospital officials available for questionin­g.

“Grady and law enforcemen­t have committed to developing new strategies to harmonize patient privacy rights with law enforcemen­t’s vital mission to protect crime victims,” Grady’s statement said.

Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard, who helped arrange for transfer of the kits to the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, said in a separate written statement that “all parties are actively working toward a final resolution of the remaining rape kits.” He was not available for comment before deadline.

Grady’s decision to turn the rape kits over to authoritie­s, while welcome news to victims rights advocates, is placing a strain on resources at the GBI, which manages the labs that test the kits.

GBI lacks manpower and funding to handle the additional workload, said Deputy Director George Herrin, who runs the agency’s forensic lab system. There are so many Grady kits that it can on- ly accept 100 of them per week.

“We’re completely swamped,” said Herrin. A single kit can cost $600 to $1,000 to analyze, and the additional kits from Grady could increase the current four-month wait for DNA results. This year, GBI is already coping with a 20 percent increase statewide in law enforcemen­t requests for forensic testing.

Grady declined requests to release the kits or make them available to an out- side auditor for more than a decade. They said patients endured what can be a six-hour forensic exam where their wounds are photograph­ed and body cavities swabbed, but told Grady they did not want a police investigat­ion. If a victim signed a form consenting to the kit’s release, but said verbally they did not wish to cooperate with law enforcemen­t, Grady filed the kit away because federal privacy regulation­s barred their release, hos- pital attorney Timothy Jefferson said.

But those same federal rules permit hospitals to hand evidence to police if required by state law; Georgia law mandates that hospitals report injuries that may be tied to a crime and disclose informatio­n that can help an investigat­ion.

The release of the kits is only the first step in what could be a yearslong process. Law enforcemen­t has yet to decide how — or if — to proceed with investigat­ions once testing takes place. Opening them would require contacting victims, which could inflict additional emotional trauma on them.

Regardless, Georgia Innocence Project Executive Director Aimee Maxwell, who offered to audit Grady’s kits more than a decade ago, is glad to see the evidence is finally in the hands of law enforcemen­t. “I think we’re going to get some answers, and I think it’s great,” Maxwell said. “Wouldn’t it have been great if it happened 15 years ago?”

 ?? BRANT SANDERLIN / AJC ?? Forensic scientist Erin Norris processes a rape kit recently at the GBI crime lab in Decatur. GBI officials say the Grady kits have overwhelme­d the labs.
BRANT SANDERLIN / AJC Forensic scientist Erin Norris processes a rape kit recently at the GBI crime lab in Decatur. GBI officials say the Grady kits have overwhelme­d the labs.
 ?? BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL ?? Grady Memorial Hospital has 1,500 rape kits sitting in file cabinets, untested for DNA evidence that could be used to track down rapists.
BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL Grady Memorial Hospital has 1,500 rape kits sitting in file cabinets, untested for DNA evidence that could be used to track down rapists.

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