https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/12/rapid-dna-analysis
Rapid DNA: Coming Soon to a Police Department or Immigration Office Near You
In
the amount of time it takes to get lunch, the government can now
collect your DNA and extract a profile that identifies you and your
family members.
Rapid DNA Analyzers—machines
with the ability to process DNA in 90 minutes or less—are an
operational reality and are being marketed to the federal government and
state and local law enforcement agencies around the country. These
machines, each about the size of a laser printer, are designed to be
used in the field by non-scientists, and—if you believe the hype from
manufacturers like IntegenX and NetBio—will soon “revolutionize the use of DNA by making it a routine identification and investigational tool.”
From documents we received recently from US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and DHS’s Science & Technology division, we’ve learned that the two agencies are working with outside venders NetBio, Lockheed Martin and IntegenX and have “earmarked substantial funds” to develop a Rapid DNA analyzer that can verify familial relationships for refugee and asylum applications.
In the refugee context—where people are often
stranded in camps far from their homes with little access to the
documentation needed to prove they should be granted asylum in the
US—DNA identification could be useful for both the federal government
and the asylum seeker.
However, DNA samples contain such sensitive,
private and personal information that their indefinite storage and
unlimited sharing create privacy risks far worse than other types of
data. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) stated in a 2008 Note titled DNA Testing to Establish Family Relationships in the Refugee Context that DNA testing “can have serious implications for the right to privacy and family unity” and should be used only as a “last resort.” The UNHCR also stated that, if DNA is collected, it “should not be used for any other purpose
(for instance medical tests or criminal investigations) than the
verification of family relationships” and that DNA associated with the
test “should normally be destroyed once a decision has been made.”
It seems USCIS is not heeding the UNHCR’s
recommendations; the documents show that USCIS wants to use Rapid DNA
analysis for much broader purposes than just verifying refugee
applications. The agency notes that DNA should be collected from all
immigration applicants—possibly even infants—and then stored in the FBI’s criminal DNA database. The agency also supports sharing immigrant DNA with “local, state, tribal, international, and other federal partners” including the Department of Defense and Interpol
on the off-chance the refugee or asylum seeker could be a criminal or
terrorist or could commit a crime or act of terrorism in the future.
This flow chart shows USCIS’s ideal DNA collection and sharing process.
USCIS is not alone in wanting to get the most out
of DNA collection. Another document we received shows that the
intelligence community and the military are interested in DNA analysis
to reveal ethnicity, health status, age, and other factors.
And while Rapid DNA analyzers are not currently set up to extract
enough data to reveal this information, IntegenX representatives at the Biometrics Consortium Conference this past September said that setting up the machines to extract additional loci would not be difficult.
Some federal agencies interested in Rapid DNA may not be able to implement it widescale for some time. Currently USCIS “does not have the authority to require DNA testing, even when fraud is highly suspected.” For that to happen, the agency would have to update 8 C.F.R. 204.2(d)(vi),1 which it has discussed doing but hasn’t yet done. And although the FBI is also very interested in Rapid DNA analyzers, legal rules prevent the Bureau from using the machines to process any DNA that wil go into its CODIS (Combined DNA Index System) database.
This hasn’t stopped Rapid DNA manufacturers from
aggressively marketing their products to state and local law enforcement
agencies across the country. IntegenX and Lockhead Martin are both pushing local governments (pdf p.3) to create their own local DNA databases (p. 17, pdf here)
instead of relying on CODIS. This has pluses and minuses—it means some
chunk of the DNA collected by state or local cops may not end up in the
FBI’s massive DNA database and become subject to repeated nationwide
searching. However, it also means that cops may not follow the stringent
DNA handling procedures currently required by the FBI2 and that, without oversight, collection procedures could become based on little or no real suspicion of criminal activity.
Whether the technology itself is accurate and
appropriate to use for immigration populations may also be an issue.
According to the documents, scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology are uncertain whether the “Likelihood Ratios”3 currently
used by accredited labs would be applicable “to an immigration
population, since the largest reference groups, whose characteristics
feed into the calculations of the ratios, are American Caucasians and
Hispanics.” DHS’s own Science & Technology Division noted at a
January 4, 2011 Working Group meeting that it was concerned “that prototype equipment may not provide totally reliable results.”
Science & Technology staff stated they could not “yet predict how
accurate the non-match findings will be, since the error rate for the
machines remains unknown.” This means that people could be excluded from
refugee programs just because the machine determined—inaccurately—that
their DNA did not match their family member’s DNA.
DHS and USCIS acknowledge that “DNA collection may create controversy.” One USCIS employee advocated for “DHS, with the help of expert public relation professionals,” to “launch a social conditioning campaign”
to “dispel the myths and promote the benefits of DNA technology.”
Another document feared that “If DHS fails to provide an adequate
response to [inquiries about its Rapid DNA Test Program] quickly, civil rights/civil liberties organizations may attempt to shut down the test program."
However, the real issues with expanded DNA
collection—and the issues these documents don’t answer—are whether DNA
collection is really necessary to solve the challenges inherent in
proving refugee entitlement to benefits; what standards and laws will
govern expanded federal, state and local DNA collection and subsequent
searches; how DNA will be collected, stored and secured; who will have
access to it after it’s collected; and what processes are in place to
destroy the DNA sample and delete data from whatever database it’s
stored in after it’s served the limited purpose for which it was
originally collected. Without answers to these questions, no amount of
“social conditioning” can convince those concerned about privacy and
civil liberties that expanded DNA collection is a good idea.
- 1. This regulation does not mention DNA testing and therefore cannot, without amendment, be used to establish a DNA testing requirement.
- 2. However, even the FBI's procedures haven’t prevented fraud and abuse at labs. And as other USCIS documents note, according to the Department of State, security and chain of custody of the DNA sample have been issues in the past. Even “accredited labs are rife with problems.”
- 3. DNA.gov defines likelihood ratio as “The ratio of two probabilities of the same event under different hypotheses. In DNA testing often expressed as the ratio between the likelihood that a given profile came from a particular individual and the likelihood that it came from a random unrelated person. Note that in this case the likelihood of each event does not add to give 1 (100% likelihood) as it does not incorporate the possibility of error or that the profiles came from twins or other near relatives.”
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