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FY2022 Washington State Patrol Forensic DNA Initiative

Award Information

Award #
15PBJA-22-GG-01729-DNAX
Funding Category
Formula
Location
Awardee County
Washington
Congressional District
Status
Open
Funding First Awarded
2022
Total funding (to date)
$2,288,450

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2022, $2,288,450)

The Washington State Patrol through the Crime Laboratory Division (WSPCLD) is responsible for analyzing evidential material associated with criminal investigations for all state and local law enforcement agencies and medical examiners within the state. Under state law (RCW 43.43.756) the WSPCLD is the established public provider of Forensic DNA services in Washington State. There are 5 casework DNA laboratories located throughout the state: Seattle, Tacoma, Marysville, Vancouver and Spokane. The CODIS laboratory is also located in the same Seattle facility as the Crime Laboratory.

The fiscal crisis created by the COVID-19 pandemic, in conjunction with 2019 test all Sexual Assault Kit (SAK) state legislation, have negatively impacted the capacity of WSPCLD to meet the demand for forensic DNA and DNA database services. Difficult austerity measures – including staggered work shifts, teleworking, and partial layoffs/furloughs – came at a time when WSPCLD was taking charge of an immense effort to eliminate the backlog of sexual assault kits in Washington by 2022; in part, due to new legislation enacted during 2019. Additional legislation in 2019 added qualifying offenses to the CODIS-eligible offender category; increasing the number of convicted offender samples needing to be typed and entered into the CODIS database. These circumstances have fostered the appreciable increase of the submissions of casework and database cases.

The intent of this proposal is to minimize the impact of the increased workload on the WSPCLD DNA casework and database laboratories to maintain the highest possible quality of Forensic DNA testing while keeping up with advances in the field. This will be achieved by:

maintaining and increase the capacity of all WSPCLD laboratories;
maintaining continuing education for casework and database analysts; and
reducing the existing backlog of casework by outsourcing DNA analysis to a private, accredited laboratory.

Unless the overall capacity of WSPCLD to analyze DNA casework and database cases is substantially increased, the backlog and turnaround time for all Forensic DNA cases will continue to increase as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and State austerity measures related to COVID-19. Without a BJA award, the capacity of WSPCLD laboratories to process, record, screen, and analyze forensic DNA and DNA database samples will fail to satisfy current service demands.

Date Created: September 16, 2022