DNA
Do You Need Legal Help?
Complete and submit this form and we will contact you shortly. * required fields.
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) evidence is used to acquit and convict
those charged with sex
crimes. This evidence is specific to each individual, so no
two people (other than identical twins) share the same DNA. DNA
remains constant throughout one’s life, is found in virtually
every cell in the body and is easily retrievable from one’s
blood, saliva, semen, hair or skin tissue. Once collected, it will
be entered into a California DNA database. Because DNA evidence
carries so much weight, it is critical that an individual accused
of a sex offense in California hires an
experienced criminal defense attorney who specializes in California
sex crime defense and who has mastered this scientific and complex
area of the law.
Anyone arrested for or charged with a California misdemeanor
or felony (or an attempted crime) that would be required to
register
as a sex offender, pursuant to Penal code 290 if convicted or
who has been court ordered to reside in a mental health facility
or sex offender treatment program, is required to provide a DNA
sample, consisting of swab samples, right thumbprints, a full palm
print impression of each hand, and any blood specimens or other
requested biological samples. These offenses include most instances
of rape,
spousal
rape when accomplished or attempted using force, violence or
threats, rape or sexual
penetration when acting in concert with another, enticing
a female unmarried minor into prostitution, committing a sex act
where consent was procured by fear and false representations, pimping
and pandering with a minor, procuring a child under 16 for lewd
or lascivious acts, abducting
a minor for prostitution, aggravated
sexual assault of a child, incest,
sodomy,
lewd
or lascivious acts with a child under 14, oral
copulation, continuous
sexual abuse of a child, penetration
with a foreign object, certain crimes dealing with obscene
materials, indecent
exposure, conduct involving lewd or lascivious acts that fall
under “contributing
to the delinquency of a minor” and using harmful
matter to seduce a minor. An individual may submit a sample
for any other offense if agreed to in a plea-bargain.
Samples are supposed to be collected as soon as administratively
possible after an arrest, but if an officer or the prosecuting attorney
fail to verify that the samples have been collected, the court will
do so prior to the final disposition or sentencing in the case and
will require the defendant to provide a sample at that time. DNA
samples may also be collected from those who have prior convictions
from this state or from any other court that would have been qualifying
crimes if committed in this state, even if already incarcerated
or previously released. Samples that are destroyed or unusable for
any reason will be discarded and the person who provided the original
sample will be required to submit a new one.
An individual who refuses to provide a sample faces a separate
misdemeanor
charge, punishable by up to $500 and a maximum one-year jail
sentence. An individual already serving time in prison will be separately
sanctioned as well. When an individual refuses to provide a sample,
an officer may use reasonable force to collect one if the request
is pre-approved by a supervising officer. If the forced sample consists
of a cell extraction, the extraction must be videotaped.
Finally, an individual who either substitutes his or her own DNA
for another’s or who tampers with the collected sample faces
a separate felony,
punishable by two, three or four years in the state prison.
DNA samples may be removed or expunged from the database if, after
the arrest, a formal complaint was never filed, if the accused was
acquitted or if the case was dismissed and the accused has no prior
offenses that required DNA samples.
The skilled California sex crime
attorneys at The Kavinoky Law Firm understand this technical
area of the law and know the proper arguments to make to either
exclude improperly collected samples or to have the samples expunged
when appropriate. Contact them today for a free consultation
and for outstanding representation.
|