| September 28, 2005
Costs of DNA tests passed on to Oregon
taxpayers
By
Anna Song and KATU Web Staff
MILWAUKIE, Ore. - Finding the man who raped a young
girl and got her pregnant has come down to analyzing DNA
evidence from her baby, but it is the kind of DNA
testing that Oregon's crime lab does not do.
The young girl, who was 12 years old when the attack
happened, hid her pregnancy from her parents for seven
months. Police are now looking for her attacker, who is
described as an Hispanic man in his 30s.
Police
searching for rapist
The key evidence to catch the man may cost taxpayers
thousands of dollars more than it has to because
Oregon's crime lab is not equipped to do the type of DNA
testing needed - what is called a 'reverse paternity
test.'
"This child (the one the young girl gave birth to) is
a great source of evidence to hopefully be able to catch
this man," said Detective Wendi Babst, spokeswoman for
the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office.
Detectives have collected DNA from the infant and a
reverse paternity test could help determine at least a
basic DNA profile of the child's father.
However, the Oregon State Police crime lab does not
have the resources to do this kind of testing, so police
agencies and prosecutors must send the work to private
labs at an additional expense.
"If someone from the crime lab does it, there is no
additional expense to us and if someone from a private
firm does it, it can be literally thousands of dollars
of additional expense that we have to factor in," said
Chief Deputy District Attorney Greg Horner.
Horner says the extra expense is not just in the
testing.
"If the case ends up being prosecuted, there are
witness fees that we would have to pay to bring people
down to testify as to the results of the test," he said.
Those fees can run up to $300 per hour.
The Oregon State Police Crime Lab gets about a call a
month from a detective or prosecutor wanting this type
of DNA testing. A decision on whether to have the crime
lab start doing reverse paternity tests is expected to
be made by January of 2006.
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