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ظهر [كريستوفر] أمل
واحدة في أربعة الناس يكون يضاف إلى ال [دنا] قاعدة معطيات يكون طفلة, هو بالأمس.
يزوّد الرقم بيّنة بعيد أنّ الحكومة "[بيغ بروثر]" قاعدة معطيات وطنيّة بدرجة متزايدة يستهدف الناس شابّة قبل أن هم قديمة بكفاية أن يقترع.
يبدي معطيات ينال بالديموقراتيات ليبراليّ من أسئلة برلمانيّة أنّ النسبة الأطفال يكون يضاف يرتفع, مع 5,000 يكون يتضمّن كلّ شهر.
بين أكتوبر - تشرين الأوّل ويناير - كانون الثّاني, 25…
ب [أمي] [هرمون]
ذيّل الاثنان سكرامنتو, كاليفورنيا, عمدة مخبرات مشبوهتهم, [رولندو] [غلّغو], في بعد. هم لم يتلقّوا أمر قضائيّ أن يجبره أن يعطي [دنا] عينة, غير أنّ كان تنازلهم أن يحصل واحدة مهما كان - دون معرفته.
مؤخّرا, العمدة باردة حالة كان وحدة قد استخرج [دنا] قطاع جانبيّ من دم على فوطة أسّس 15 سنون مبكّرة في…
A DNA police technique used to hunt down a rapist is being lauded in the United States as an example of pioneering detective work.
Avon and Somerset Police's first success using familial DNA searches to crack unsolved cases could now be adopted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
In October 2007, 42-year-old Bridgwater man Geoffrey Godfrey was jailed for raping a 36-year-old woman in April 1993. The success of the force's ...
Richard Taylor
Britain’s police want to routinely put children as young as five on the National DNA Database (NDNAD), even when no crime has been committed.
Gary Pugh, the DNA spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) and director of forensic sciences at Scotland Yard, recently told the press, “The number of unsolved crimes says we are not sampling enough of the right people.”
According to Pugh, ...
Despite last-minute objections from Baltimore State's Attorney Patricia C. Jessamy, legislation to expand collection of DNA samples from suspects charged with violent crimes moved a step closer to final passage Friday, as a House committee made only minor changes to the version of the bill that passed the Senate last week.
The Judiciary committee voted 18-3 to approve the DNA bill, a top crime-fighting priority of Gov. Martin ...
The DNA database should probably not be extended and should certainly never become universal, Home Office Minister Tony McNulty has said, writes Matthew George.
He also told the Commons Home Affairs Committee, which is inquiring into whether Britain has a surveillance society, that such fears were the "meat of myths".
He insisted the regulatory oversight of surveillance - ranging through the DNA database and CCTV cameras to automatic number ...
It's probably no surprise, but the government's horrendous record with data security has destroyed the public's trust.
Only one of every ten people trust the government to handle their personal data, according to new research released today.
The DES survey also showed 93 per cent of people who were against or not sure about identity cards said that this was because the government had a poor track record on protecting ...
COLUMBIA - South Carolina would make DNA testing available for prisoners who claim they're innocent under a bill heading to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The co-founder of the Innocence Project told senators today that the law could both exonerate wrongly convicted prisoners and help police find the person who committed the crime.
Barry Scheck says the Innocence Project has exonerated 214 prisoners through DNA testing since 1992. He says law enforcement used ...
MPs told that calls from senior police officers will not be answered.
The government has no plans to extend the DNA database despite the wishes of senior figures within the police force to do so, home office minister Tony McNulty told MPs today.
Speaking at a Home Affairs Committee inquiry, Mcnulty said he thought the balance of the number of people on the DNA database is "about right".
Calls ...
Primary school children should be eligible for the DNA database if they exhibit behaviour indicating they may become criminals in later life, according to Britain's most senior police forensics expert.
Gary Pugh, director of forensic sciences at Scotland Yard and the new DNA spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), said a debate was needed on how far Britain should go in identifying potential offenders, given that some experts ...
A bill that would expand the criminal DNA database to include suspects of every violent crime appeared likely to pass a key House committee late Friday, despite a request from black lawmakers to postpone discussion.Members of the House judiciary committee debated potential changes to Gov. Martin O'Malley's proposal to collect DNA from all suspects in violent crimes. His administration is offering ...
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) is asking armed forces personnel to voluntarily submit DNA samples leading to fears that they are becoming part of a larger national DNA database.
Under secretary of state for defence Derek Twigg told the Commons that voluntary DNA submission has been a gradual process across the armed forces. In 1999 all aircrew pilots were asked to voluntarily submit samples. This year the ministry ...
Campaigners condemn laws that have put 1.5 million juvenilies on a database
Jamie Doward
Nearly 1.5 million 10 to 18-year-olds will have been entered on the national DNA database by this time next year, sparking claims that Britain's youths are being criminalised and disproportionately 'targeted'.
Campaign group Action on Rights for Children (Arch) says 'no other country in Europe criminalises children at such a young age; no other country ...
Sir Ian Blair says scheme would have obvious benefits for crimefighting
Computing
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair has called for the UK’s controversial DNA database to be extended across Europe to help bridge the intelligence gap caused by the removal of many of the EU's internal borders.
He made the proposal at the first pan-European Serious Organised Crime Conference in Liverpool yesterday, claiming also that a Europe-wide automated fingerprint recognition and ...
By Christine Sexton
THE DNA profiles of more than 30,000 Essex children are being kept on a police database.
Figures released in response to a Freedom of Information request also reveal that 12,345 of those young people are under 15.
The news comes after it was reported how the profile of a 13-year-old boy from Benfleet boy was being kept on the DNA database, despite police admitting he had been wrongfully arrested.
The ...
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