Award Information
Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2002, $5,039,535)
Project Summary for 2002-DN-BX-K021
DNA analysis used in conjunction with the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) is a powerful investigative tool beginning at the crime scene with the collection of evidence and ending with a judicial conclusion. For CODIS to be truly effective and DNA to reach its full crime-solving potential, DNA databases must be populated with both offender profiles and DNA profiles from crime scene evidence. DNA is especially useful in cases where no suspect in known. DNA profiles obtained from evidence collected in cases where there is no suspect can be compared to local, State, and national DNA databases through CODIS for a match between the evidence and a convicted felon.
The New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services will examine 3,146 no suspect cases using federal funding to pay for overtime, equipment for increasing capacity, supplies for DNA analysis and contracts for outsourcing. DNA analysis will be performed within New York's State and county forensic laboratory system and by outsourcing to private vendors. The resulting DNA profiles will be entered into the forensic index section of their State DNA database to be compared to convicted offender indices. Perhaps 10% or more of these forensic profiles from unsolved crimes will find their solutions in the DNA profiles of the convicted offender samples currently populating CODIS.
ca/ncf
Similar Awards
- Continuation and Expansion of DCCI Stegextraction Project
- NIJ Co-funding for the NSF Center for Advanced Research in Forensic Science (CARFS)
- Improvements to Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry for Quantitative Forensic Analysis Using a Short Pulse (100 Femtosecond) Ultraviolet Laser