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TIME THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE DNA Detectives Genetic fingerprinting is already being used to identify criminals. Can the rest of us be far behind? BY JEFFREY KLUGER
In October a
24-year-old woman
who had been
comatose for more
than three years
gave birth to a baby
girl. It was only a few
days before the
delivery that the staff
at the woman's
nursing home in Lawrence, Mass., even
discovered that she was pregnant. Under the
circumstances, the pregnancy had to have been
the result of rape; yet the woman was uniquely
unable to name her assailant. If she couldn't
speak, however, the blood of her daughter could.
Shortly after the baby's birth, the police drew a
sample of the infant's blood, then took voluntary
samples from male relatives of the woman as
well as from nursing-home personnel and others
who might have had access to her. Comparing
the men's DNA with the baby's, they figured,
could lead them to the rapist.
While the genetic dragnet cast over Lawrence
has not yet yielded any arrests, it has led to
controversy. Over the past decade, as anybody
who followed the O.J. Simpson trial can attest,
DNA profiling has become almost as important a
part of crime fighting as fingerprinting. But even
as technology pushes forensic science forward,
the Constitution has worried it back. The Fourth
Amendment guarantees citizens protection from
unreasonable searches and seizures, and
although the Founding Fathers didn't contemplate
strands of DNA when drafting the Bill of Rights,
what search could be more invasive than an
assay of our very genes?
In Lawrence the question is being raised anew,
as men--all but one of them presumably
innocent--weigh the ease of submitting to a DNA
test against their right to refuse and the
suspicion that would be raised if they did. It's a
problem that is becoming more and more
familiar--and, for civil libertarians, cause for more
and more alarm. "These are technologies in
which powerful organs in society control
members with less power," frets Philip Bereano,
a member of the American Civil Liberties Union's
board of directors. "They are inherently violative of
civil rights."
The power of DNA technology expanded
exponentially last fall when the FBI activated its
new Combined DNA Index System. A database
containing the gene prints of 250,000 convicted
felons--as well as 4,600 DNA samples left behind
at the scene of unsolved crimes--the system acts
as a sort of investigatory intranet through which
law-enforcement officials can surf when trying to
match a known criminal to a crime.
To streamline sampling, the system identifies
subjects not by their entire genetic blueprint but
by tiny stretches of DNA coding, known as short
tandem repeats that are just two to seven
base-pairs long. Though little more than genetic
gibberish, STRs yield remarkably accurate
results. If three of the ministrands match a
suspect's, the likelihood is 2,000 to 1 that police
have the right person. Nine matches boost the
odds to 1 billion to 1. FBI sampling rules require
no fewer than 13 matches. "Its success as a
crime-fighting tool is incredible," says
Christopher Asplen, director of a national
DNA-study commission.
Too incredible for some people's taste, however.
Once a database like this is assembled, civil
rights advocates argue, it is unlikely to be
disassembled, and it is only a matter of time
before data grow to include not just wrongdoers
but also law-abiding citizens. Proponents of DNA
testing dismiss this as libertarian alarmism, but
experience suggests otherwise.
In December the police commissioner of New
York City recommended that anyone even
arrested for a crime--never mind convicted of
one--be required to submit a routine DNA
sample. In England, where a genetic database
has operated since 1995, suspects are routinely
screened this way--more than 360,000 gene
prints are online--though police do promise that
such profiles will be scrubbed from the record if
the person is cleared. English officials
investigating a crime in a small town sometimes
perform mass screenings in which thousands of
people are asked to surrender a mouth swab full
of DNA. The law gives anyone the right to
decline, but as residents of Lawrence, Mass., are
learning, no law can prevent the slit-eyed look
police give a person who actually chooses to
exercise that right. "There is no such thing as a
technology like this without an ideology of
surveillance and control behind it," says Bereano.
The problem for Bereano and other detractors is
that DNA technology works. In England as many
as 500 matches are made a week between
database entries and samples taken from crime
scenes. When mass sweeps are conducted, the
police claim a 70% success rate in cracking the
crime they're investigating. In the U.S., where the
months-old national database has barely got on
its feet, the FBI claims that 200 outstanding
cases have already been solved. What's more,
on occasion, DNA sampling benefits not only the
people investigating crimes but also the people
convicted of them. Since 1976, 75 death-row
inmates have been spared execution in the U.S.
when their convictions were overturned. At least
10 of the reversals came on the strength of new
DNA evidence.
This kind of investigatory yin and yang is keeping
opponents of DNA fingerprinting mollified--but for
how long? Now that the gene genie is out of the
bottle, there may be little that can be done to
stuff it back in. Scientists in the U.S. and
England already speak dreamily of moving
beyond testing STRs alone, expanding their work
to sample other--more richly encoded--areas of
the genome. Kevin Sullivan of England's Forensic
Science Service predicts that within a decade
researchers may be able to use DNA analysis to
draw a sort of genetic police sketch of a
suspect's appearance, including build, race,
facial shape and even inherited physical defects.
The most complex traits, of course, would be the
ones even the best detectives would have a hard
time seeing: personality traits. If temperament is
at least partly determined by genetic hard-wiring,
somewhere in the vast tangle of human DNA
there must be strands that influence
behavior--including criminal behavior.
The problem is, If you could locate such genes,
what would you do with that knowledge? Should
you incarcerate people for crimes they haven't
yet committed but are genetically predisposed to
commit? Is it possible to fix such miswired
genes, and if so, should you try? The possibility
of mucking about with such fundamental genetic
coding gives a lot of people existential
shivers--and it should. "This is the kind of
technology that would flourish in an Orwellian
society," says Bereano.
For now there's nothing to suggest that things
are nearly so dire: DNA fingerprinting has been
used for years, and so far it is only wrongdoers
who have real cause to wish it hadn't. But when it
comes to scientific advances, human beings
have often been a slapdash species--racing out
ahead with a new technology before fully
appreciating its power. If DNA fingerprinting
should get into the wrong hands, society's
law-abiding members may find they have more in
common with its lawbreakers than they ever
dreamed possible.
--REPORTED BY MELISSA AUGUST/WASHINGTON AND HELEN GIBSON/LONDON. © 1999 TIME Magazine
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