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These are cases in which a request for DNA testing is frivolous.
Considerations for these cases include, among other things, whether:
- A voluntary and reliable confession was obtained.
- A guilty plea was entered.
- The petitioner testified to performing the charged act, but raised a defense such as consent, self-defense, duress or entrapment.
- The petitioner was apprehended in the act or other strong evidence of identity or involvement exists, such as fingerprint evidence.
Example: The trial transcript discloses the existence of other evidence that makes the petitioner's claim meaningless, as in a burglary conviction in which the petitioner was apprehended at the crime scene.
Additional Online Courses
- What Every First Responding Officer Should Know About DNA Evidence
- Collecting DNA Evidence at Property Crime Scenes
- DNA – A Prosecutor’s Practice Notebook
- Crime Scene and DNA Basics
- Laboratory Safety Programs
- DNA Amplification
- Population Genetics and Statistics
- Non-STR DNA Markers: SNPs, Y-STRs, LCN and mtDNA
- Firearms Examiner Training
- Forensic DNA Education for Law Enforcement Decisionmakers
- What Every Investigator and Evidence Technician Should Know About DNA Evidence
- Principles of Forensic DNA for Officers of the Court
- Law 101: Legal Guide for the Forensic Expert
- Laboratory Orientation and Testing of Body Fluids and Tissues
- DNA Extraction and Quantitation
- STR Data Analysis and Interpretation
- Communication Skills, Report Writing, and Courtroom Testimony
- Español for Law Enforcement
- Amplified DNA Product Separation for Forensic Analysts