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Do Statutes of Limitations Apply to DNA Cases?
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Last week, the New York Times reported that Milwaukee, Wis.,
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prosecutors had filed rape and kidnapping charges against a "John Doe"
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defendant identifiable only by the DNA code of his semen. (DNA, like
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fingerprints, is unique to each individual.) The prosecutors took this step
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because the statute of limitations for the crime was about to expire and they
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had no better way of identifying their suspect. In cases where DNA evidence is
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located, will statutes of limitations become irrelevant?
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Statute of limitations laws require plaintiffs to take legal action within a
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specified time in order for their claim to be valid. (Murder is the one crime
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exempted from statutes of limitations.) The purpose is to guarantee defendants'
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Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial and to ensure that they will not have
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to defend themselves against stale evidence. (It would be difficult, for
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example, to find witnesses to corroborate an alibi many years after the
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fact.)
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In general, a warrant must be signed--or, in a civil case, a complaint
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filed--before the statute of limitations expires. In Wisconsin, where the
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statute of limitations in rape cases is six years, a warrant requires a name,
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an alias, or a physical description of the suspect that would allow him to be
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arrested with reasonable certainty. This ensures that prosecutors are charging
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a specific suspect. It also prevents them from bringing charges in secret,
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which would violate Fifth Amendment due process rights.
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Some defense attorneys say that allowing prosecutors to charge suspects by
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their DNA would effectively suspend the statute of limitations because DNA is
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recovered in a very large percentage of criminal cases. And if a suspect can be
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charged by his DNA, why not charge other John Does by their fingerprints, which
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are ubiquitous at crime scenes, too?
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The Milwaukee case does not necessarily imply such an expansion of
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prosecutorial discretion. In most crimes where DNA comes into play, its
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presence does not definitively prove guilt. A trace of DNA on a murder weapon,
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for example, only demonstrates that the suspect touched it--not that he
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actually committed the crime. But the Milwaukee suspect's DNA was extracted
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from semen swabbed from the victims' genitals on the nights of the attacks.
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Arguably, few fingerprints (or other identifiers) would be sufficiently
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persuasive for a warrant to be issued on their basis alone. The Milwaukee case
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would likely set a precedent only for the small set of cases where DNA is
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overwhelming proof of guilt. (Defense lawyer Barry Scheck took this position on
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CNN's Burden of Proof . Click here to read a transcript of the discussion.)
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It could also be argued that charging an individual by his DNA amounted to
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charging him in secret because few people would recognize their own genetic
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code even if they read it in a newspaper. In any event, the statute of
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limitations questions surrounding the Milwaukee case will be moot until
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prosecutors apprehend a suspect, match his DNA to John Doe's, charge him with
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the crime, and his lawyers protest the prosecutors' strategy.
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Next question?
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