At recent Congressional hear­ings, mem­bers of the Senate Judiciary Committee ques­tioned the Department of Justice as to why it has not approved any grants under the Kirk Bloodsworth DNA Post-Conviction Testing Program. Part of the Innocence Protection Act of 2004, the pur­pose of the pro­gram was to help defray DNA test­ing costs through grants to indi­vid­ual states. It has had con­gres­sion­al fund­ing of almost $14 mil­lion over the past three years, but has failed to dole out any of the funds. Kirk Bloodsworth (pic­tured), the first per­son on death row to be exon­er­at­ed by DNA evi­dence, after whom the pro­gram is named, told the com­mit­tee, The fail­ure of this Department of Justice to grant states mon­ey under the Bloodsworth pro­gram is not acci­den­tal, nor is it the result of the states’ fail­ure to com­ply with the grant’s pro­vi­sions. The DOJ has been against this pro­gram from the very beginning.”

The pro­vi­sions of the pro­gram require that a state wish­ing to be grant­ed funds must have a DNA test­ing pro­gram in place and are pre­serv­ing blood sam­ples. Thus far, only 3 states have applied to the pro­gram, but none were in com­pli­ance with the pro­vi­sions, includ­ing Arizona, which has a com­pre­hen­sive DNA test­ing pro­gram. Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy stat­ed, If Arizona can’t make it, I’m begin­ning to won­der if any state in the nation can make it.”

Some foren­sic spe­cial­ists also believe the pro­gram is not being man­aged effec­tive­ly. Peter Marone, direc­tor of the Virginia Department of Forensic Science and chair­man of the Consortium of Forensic Science Organizations, indi­cat­ed that the time con­straints were unrea­son­able: The time per­mit­ted to respond to these [grant] solic­i­ta­tions from the Department of Justice has been just four weeks. Unfortunately, the solic­i­ta­tion require­ments were not avail­able to any of the lab­o­ra­to­ries pri­or to the solic­i­ta­tion announce­ment; there­fore, four weeks meant four weeks. Further, com­pli­ance with these require­ments has required imple­men­ta­tion of new leg­is­la­tion or at least an amend­ment of exist­ing statutes at the state lev­el.”
(“DOJ upbraid­ed over stalled DNA pro­gram,” by Marcia Coyle, National Law Journal, January 28, 2008). See Innocence and Recent Legislative Activity.

Citation Guide