10-31-2021, 08:44 PM
In the Spring of 2009, the FBI started warehousing DNA samples of Americans who had been arrested ââ¬â but not necessarily convicted ââ¬â of a crime. People declared not guilty of a crime, or who were never even charged with a crime, can have their DNA records expunged from the FBI database if they go to court, obtain a court order, have the court order certified and submit it to the appropriate criminal records laboratory in a state and/or the Federal Bureau of Investigation Laboratory Division in Quantico, withââ¬Â¦
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ââ¬Â¦ you get the idea. Very few of the DNA records of innocent people are going to be expunged. Most of them are going to continue to aggregate in the records of the FBI. Indeed, since I last checked in November of 2009 the number of arrestee DNA samples (the FBI insists on assuming guilt by calling them ââ¬Åoffender profilesââ¬Â) has shot up from about 6 million to over 9 million.
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http://irregulartimes.com/2012/01/02/doe...ggest-not/
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ââ¬Â¦ you get the idea. Very few of the DNA records of innocent people are going to be expunged. Most of them are going to continue to aggregate in the records of the FBI. Indeed, since I last checked in November of 2009 the number of arrestee DNA samples (the FBI insists on assuming guilt by calling them ââ¬Åoffender profilesââ¬Â) has shot up from about 6 million to over 9 million.
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http://irregulartimes.com/2012/01/02/doe...ggest-not/
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