Bandera de Estados Unidos

Un sitio oficial del Gobierno de Estados Unidos, Departamento de Justicia.

Forensic DNA Education for Law Enforcement Decisionmakers

Process

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Process

There are two parts to the familial search process. First, the software searches available DNA profiles in the offender databank to identify candidate offender relatives and then ranks them in the order of their potential to be a close relative of the person whose DNA is at the crime scene. Next, the list is evaluated and the matches with the highest likelihood of identifying a familial connection (typically father to son or brother to brother) undergo additional DNA typing: Y-chromosome testing.2,3 A match between Y-STR profiles in this second step of the process can strongly establish the existence of a close familial relationship between the suspect and the person whose DNA is in the evidence searched.

 2 Edmund G. Brown Jr., Attorney General, DNA Partial Match (Crime Scene DNA Profile to Offender) Policy, Bureau of Forensic Services (Jan. 2008) PDF download: 48kB
3 The State of Colorado's DNA Familial Search Policy, Colorado Bureau of Investigations policy statement, 10/22/09 PDF download: 640kB

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