Prosecutor: DNA led police to pair accused in 1993 murder, robbery of two Navy sailors

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - DNA evidence led authorities to two men accused of robbing and fatally shooting two San Diego-based sailors more than 18 years ago in an area of Otay Mesa popular for after-hours drinking and bonfires, a prosecutor said Wednesday.

Edward Jesus Elias and Leopoldo Castro Chavez II, both 36, are each charged with two counts of murder in the Sept. 25, 1993, deaths of 20-year-old Eugene "Cliff" Ellis and 23-year-old Keith Combs. The victims were stationed aboard the aircraft carrier USS Constellation.

In her opening statement, Deputy District Attorney Andrea Freshwater said Chavez and Elias robbed the victims of their wallets and ID then "executed both of them needlessly." Ellis' new Toyota pickup truck was also stolen, the prosecutor said.

Defense attorney Dan Tandon told jurors that Chavez came upon the victims' bodies, went through their pockets, and drove off in Ellis' truck.

"Although death is a tragedy, it's an opportunity for some," the defense attorney said in his opening statement. "Mr. Chavez didn't kill those young men. He took from their bodies."

Elias' attorney, Jeff Martin, said he would give an opening statement when the defense case started.

According to the prosecution, both victims were shot three times from close range -- Combs in the back, side of the head and back of the head, and Ellis in the chest, temple and side of the head.

Their bodies were found about 20 feet apart around 7 a.m. in an area east of Palm Avenue and Interstate 805, where they had gone to have a bonfire and drink beer with other Navy personnel. Evidence showed that Ellis struggled with his killers, Freshwater said.

The prosecutor said Ellis and Combs went to the remote and rugged area about 1:30 a.m. after going to a bar popular with Navy personnel.

A witness recalled a car pulling up to the bonfire area around 4 a.m., with two "smart asses" laughing in the back seat, she said.

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Prosecutor: DNA led police to pair accused in 1993 murder, robbery of two Navy sailors

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DNA Leads To Charges In 1974 Oakland Murder Of 13-Year-Old

OAKLAND (CBS SF) DNA evidence has allowed Alameda County prosecutors to file charges against a man suspected of sexually assaulting and murdering a 13-year-old Oakland girl 38 years ago.

Curtis Tucker, now 63, was charged with murder Monday for the killing of Julie McElhiney on Aug. 9, 1974.

He has also been charged with the special-circumstance allegations of committing murder while carrying out lewd or lascivious acts on a child and committing murder during a robbery.

Oakland police Sgt. Michael Weisenberg said in a probable cause statement filed in court that McElhiney, who was a sixth-grader at Sequoia Elementary School, was found about 5:40 p.m. the day of her murder face down on the second floor of her familys apartment at 3022 Pleitner Ave.

She was transported to Highland Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.

Weisenberg said an autopsy indicated that McElhiney had been murdered, and the primary cause of her death was determined to be blunt force trauma to her head.

The coroner also documented that there was an injury to the girls vaginal area, Weisenberg said.

The Oakland Police Departments criminalistics team processed the clothing that McElhiney was wearing at the time of her death for biological evidence, and Tuckers DNA was found, according to Weisenberg.

He said Tucker has previous arrests and convictions for sexual assault and burglary.

In addition to the murder charge and the two special circumstances, the Alameda County District Attorneys Office charged Tucker with having a prior conviction in 1972 for second-degree commercial burglary.

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DNA Leads To Charges In 1974 Oakland Murder Of 13-Year-Old

Posted in DNA

DNA Database Expansion moves forward, Oneida County DA applauds bill

Story Created: Mar 14, 2012 at 10:27 PM EDT

Story Updated: Mar 14, 2012 at 10:28 PM EDT

The bill also significantly expands defendants access to DNA testing and comparison both before and after conviction in appropriate circumstances, as well as to discovery after conviction to demonstrate their innocence.

Governor Cuomo introduced the DNA Databank legislation as a centerpiece of his 2012 legislative agenda. "It is a proven fact: DNA helps solve crimes, prosecute the guilty, and protects the innocent," said Governor Cuomo. "This bill will greatly improve law enforcement's ability to keep New York communities safe and bring justice to victims of violent crimes, as well as those who have been wrongly convicted. For too long, a limiting factor to our ability to solve crimes through DNA was the fact the law did not encompass all crimes. This new law will right those wrongs. I commend Majority Leader Skelos and Speaker Silver for their leadership on this issue and thank the members of the Legislature for putting New Yorkers first."

Oneida County District Attorney Scott McNamera says "Expanding the DNA Databank to include all individuals convicted of a crime will be beneficial to both law enforcement officials and victims of violent crimes. Now that we have the technology needed to assist in the investigation of crimes, we must use it. This new law will provide justice for victims, as well as those who have been wrongfully convicted. I applaud the Governor's efforts in getting this bill passed, and thank him, the Senate and Assembly for their commitment to fighting and preventing crime."

Senate Majority Leader Dean G. Skelos said: "DNA is the 21st Century equivalent of a fingerprint and the most powerful law enforcement tool to catch and prosecute criminals and protect victims. The Senate fought to create the DNA Databank and I applaud the efforts of Governor Cuomo, the law enforcement community and victims' advocacy groups to expand it to include all crimes and make it even more effective." Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said, "This legislation accomplishes two important objectives; it expands the DNA Databank to all crimes and it provides for more fair and equal access to DNA testing and the Databank for those who are wrongly charged with and convicted of crimes. When a person is wrongly convicted, the real perpetrator is allowed to remain free and potentially commit other crimes. Therefore, in addition to expanding the DNA Databank to help identify the true criminal, this legislation will, for the first time, provide wrongly convicted defendants with a fair opportunity to prove their innocence. Further, the expansion of the DNA Databank will help to make New York safer and provide an important tool for law enforcement. I thank Governor Cuomo for his leadership on this important issue."

Senator Steve Saland said, "Currently, not all misdemeanors and felonies require a DNA sample to be collected. The expansion is particularly critical when studies show that persons who commit serious crimes have also often committed other crimes including lower-level misdemeanors. This legislation will provide a powerful tool to bring closure to unsolved crimes and prevent further crimes from taking place, while providing a means by which a wrongfully convicted person can be exonerated, or a suspect eliminated. I appreciate the efforts of the Governor and the Assembly to achieve an agreement on this bill." Assemblyman Joseph R. Lentol said, "Expanding the Databank will help solve more crimes. This bill, by authorizing the courts to allow greater access to DNA testing and databanks comparisons, should also help reduce instances of wrongful prosecution and wrongful conviction. The person who is wrongly convicted is unjustly punished. The victim is given a false sense of security and has to relive the crime a second time when the truth comes out. And we are all put at risk when the real perpetrator is left free to commit other crimes. This legislation takes important steps to help prevent wrongful convictions while also expanding the DNA Databank to help law enforcement keep criminals off our streets. I praise the Governor for his hard work."

The agreement includes the following reforms to the criminal justice system:

- "All Crimes DNA Expansion: This legislation will make New York the first state in the country to expand its DNA Databank so dramatically, a reform that promises to solve thousands of crimes and prevent thousands of others. Since its launch in 1996, New York State's DNA Databank has been a powerful tool both for preventing and solving crimes- including more than 2,900 convictions- and for proving innocence, including countless suspects cleared early-on in investigations. DNA evidence has also helped exonerate 27 New Yorkers who were wrongfully convicted. Previously, state law only permitted DNA to be collected from 48 percent of offenders convicted of a Penal Law crime. Among the exclusions were numerous crimes that statistics have shown to be precursors to violent offenses. As a result, New York State missed important opportunities to prevent needless suffering of crime victims and failed to use a powerful tool that could be used to exonerate the innocent.

- Expanded Access for Certain Criminal Defendants to DNA Testing: This legislation will allow defendants in certain criminal cases to obtain DNA testing prior to trial to demonstrate their innocence. Further, under appropriate circumstances defendants convicted after a guilty plea will be allowed access to such testing. Together, these reforms will help to ensure that innocent defendants are not convicted or, if convicted after a plea, are able to demonstrate their actual innocence.

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DNA Database Expansion moves forward, Oneida County DA applauds bill

Posted in DNA

DNA helps win conviction in brutal baseball bat death

March 15, 2012 12:00 AM

STOCKTON - DNA evidence convinced a jury to convict a Stockton man of first-degree murder Tuesday in San Joaquin County Superior Court.

Rudolph Delsie, 47, used a baseball bat to beat Todd Phillps, 42, to death - hitting him three times in the head and four times in the back - inside his North Commerce Street apartment the weekend of Oct. 1, 2009, the jury decided.

"The victim's blood was on the barrel of the bat, and the defendant's DNA was on the grip of the bat," said Deputy District Attorney Thomas Testa, who prosecuted the case. "It was (Phillips') own bat that he kept around for protection."

A motive for the murder was never fully pronounced in court, Testa said. Delsie claimed to have not known Phillips, but witnesses testified that he did. At some point in their past, Delsie is said to have felt "ripped off" in some kind of pact, possibly a drug deal, the two had agreed upon.

The verdict came after seven hours of deliberation Monday and Tuesday, following a 12-day trial.

Delsie will be sentenced to 75 years to life in prison without the possibility of parole April 30.

Phillips' family expressed relief with the verdict and were pleased to have some closure. The father of five - three daughters and two sons ranging from ages 7 to 20 - is remembered as a kind and caring man who came to a crossroads in his life and battled drug problems.

His mother, Ellen Donaldson of Stockton, knew what it was like to lose a child before her son's brutal beating. She lost a daughter in 1966. The 3-year-old had health problems and died during surgery.

"With my daughter, I felt like that was in God's hands. This was so violent. Nobody should have to go through that," Donaldson said. "This verdict brings some closure, so I'm happy for that. But murder changes your whole life, because it is not a natural death."

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DNA helps win conviction in brutal baseball bat death

Posted in DNA

DNA profile created in body probe

14 March 2012 Last updated at 09:12 ET

A full DNA profile has been created of an unidentified woman whose body was found in North Yorkshire in 1981.

As part of a cold case review, the body was exhumed at Malton cemetery in January in order to recover DNA material that might help identify her.

The body was found on a remote country road in Sutton Bank following a tip-off from an anonymous caller.

Police have revealed the caller said he could not reveal his identity "in the interests of national security".

Det Supt Lewis Raw, from North Yorkshire Police, said the DNA profile would now be checked against other people who had contacted police believing that the woman may be a relative or friend.

"We are very pleased with the outcome of the tests.

"Due to the length of time that the body had been buried at the cemetery in Malton, there was a possibility that a full profile might not be obtained."

Mr Raw added: "The DNA profile will now be checked against the people who have come forward to identify any familial link with the deceased.

"However, before any samples are taken from the people who have come forward, research will be conducted around physical similarities between the families and the deceased, including dental records and other physical characteristics."

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DNA profile created in body probe

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DNA match leads to man's arrest in 1974 Oakland slaying of teen girl

OAKLAND -- In what is believed to be the oldest cold case solved so far by Oakland police, a DNA match has led to special circumstance murder charges being filed against a 63-year-old ex-convict in the August 1974 fatal beating and sexual molestation of a 13-year-old East Oakland girl, authorities said Tuesday.

Curtis J. Tucker is charged with murder and the special circumstance enhancements of lewd or lascivious acts upon a child and that the killing happened during a burglary.

The victim, Julie McElhiney, a sixth grader at Sequoia Elementary School, was found about 5:40 p.m. Aug. 9, 1974, by her mother, in the bathroom of their apartment in the 3000 block of Pleitner Avenue. She had been beaten to death. Her mother told investigators she had talked to her daughter on the phone about 1 p.m. and there was no indication anything was wrong.

Tucker, a U.S. Army veteran who was arrested last Thursday at an Oakland veterans clinic, refused to talk to investigators, said Sgt. Mike Weisenberg, a patrol sergeant who works part-time in the department's cold case unit.

Weisenberg said the family did not know Tucker and had no prior contact with him. He said police are not sure of the motive.

Authorities said Tucker has a criminal record going back to the 1970s, including a felony burglary conviction in Oakland in 1972 that he went to prison for. In that case, he posed as a deliveryman and broke into a woman's downtown apartment and tried to sexually

He also has arrests in other states, including one in Washington that led to him being identified in the Oakland slaying.

The department a few years ago formed a cold case unit made up of a retired sergeant and current officers who help investigate cold cases part-time like Weisenberg. Recently an officer was assigned full-time to the unit.

Weisenberg was assigned the McElhiney case on April 2, 2010. He reviewed the evidence and found that a T-shirt Julie was wearing had semen stains on it. He requested a DNA analysis on April 22, 2010.

Because of a severe backup in the Oakland police crime lab, a possible match did not come back until last November after a nationwide DNA database search. The match with Tucker's DNA was confirmed with additional testing, as is procedure in such cases.

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DNA match leads to man's arrest in 1974 Oakland slaying of teen girl

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Simple test reveals DNA percentages

CLEVELAND - Saturday is St. Patrick's Day, a celebration of ancestry. Theres a company based in Ohio that can show you where your DNA comes from. All you need are some cotton swabs and this envelope.

NewsChannel5 traveled to the Cincinnati area to visit the lab of the DNA Diagnostics Center. With its AncestrybyDNA test, the company can actually tell you your ethnic make-up down to the percentages.

Dr. Michael Baird is the chief science officer of the company.

The four broad ethnic groups we're looking at are European, Sub-Saharan African, East Asian, and Indigenous American," Baird said.

Indigenous American means Native American. So, how does the AncestrybyDNA test work? Baird said they look for whats called ancestry informative markers.

And these are markers in the DNA that have been around for 10,000 years or more. So we look at a battery of those and determine what percentage of those you have in your genome, and we can determine what your ethnicity is, Baird said.

"Desperate Housewives" actress Eva Longoria took a similar test on Dr. Henry Louis gates' PBS program called "Faces of America." She thought the test would show that she was mostly Native American.

But, her ethnic pie chart showed that she's 70 percent European, 27 percent Native American and three percent African.

Oprah Winfrey took a DNA ancestry test and it turns out that the queen of talk is 89 percent African, 8 percent Native American and 3 percent East Asian. On "The George Lopez Show," actor and comedian Larry David found out hes 63 percent European and 37 percent Native American.

Dr. Michael Baird was curious about his ancestry.

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Simple test reveals DNA percentages

Posted in DNA

Man Beats Machines In DNA Alignment Computer Game [VIDEO]

Here's one instance when man triumphs over the visually-impaired machine. The online game Phylo lets gamers solve the multiple sequence alignment (MSA) problem by finding the best possible DNA sequence match between up to eight species at a time --- and, amazingly, beating out a computer, according to a study reported in the journal PLoS One.

[More from Mashable: iPad 3 Concept Looks Beautiful But Would It Work? [VIDEO]]

We have shown that humans game-playing visual talents can do some things better than a computer algorithm, the study's lead author Jrme Waldisphl, a computational biologist at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, said in Nature.com.

If a player's score beats the MULTIZ, a computer alignment program hosted by the University of California, Santa Cruz, their scores will be displayed in the game's hall of fame. To play, gamers shift the sequences one block at a time to find alignments before time runs out. Players who align similar sequences before their time is up, get their sequences entered into Phylo's database.

[More from Mashable: Babies With iPads Blog Implodes From Cuteness [PICS]]

So far, Phylo has 12,252 registered users and almost 3,000 regular players. But it does take some biology know-how to play the game. So far, gamers have come up with about "350,000 solutions to various MSA problems, beating the accuracy of alignments from MULTIZ in roughly 70% of the sequences they manipulated," notes the article.

There are many fascinating innovations for decoding and studying DNA. Just last month scientists unveiled a biological computer that could extract DNA from a chip. The biological computer acts like computer software to extract images.

What was once a subject only scientists and academics were concerned with, the idea of DNA and what unraveling it means for humans, is becoming an increasingly known and tangible concept.

This isn't the first time gamers have played a role in helping scientists find answers and solutions to complex problems. Last year online gamers helped to discover an enzyme of an AIDS-like virus that had been a mystery for years.

Have you, by chance, played Phylo or any other biology-based games? Tell us about your experience in the comments.

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Man Beats Machines In DNA Alignment Computer Game [VIDEO]

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DNA 'snared rapist 20 years later'

A serial sex attacker violently raped a complete stranger and was traced through his DNA more than 20 years later, a court has heard.

Antoni Imiela, 57, is accused of a "terrifying" assault on Sheila Jankowitz near her flat in south-east London in the early hours of Christmas Day 1987.

Prosecutor Richard Hearnden told jurors at the Old Bailey that the attack was "a horrific ordeal suffered by Mrs Jankowitz at the hands of a complete stranger".

Years after the alleged assault Imiela went on to commit a series of seven rapes for which he was convicted in 2004.

Mr Hearnden told the jury: "He was linked to each of those rapes by the presence of his DNA... The prosecution say therefore it would be an extraordinary coincidence for Mrs Jankowitz to have fabricated an allegation of rape against a totally innocent man, a man with whom she had enjoyed consensual sex and a man who we now know later went on to rape seven other females in similar circumstances."

Mrs Jankowitz - who died in 2006 - had been to the pub with her husband Erwin on Christmas Eve in 1987 but the couple had an argument and went their separate ways.

She returned home to their Forest Hill flat to see if he was there and finding he was not, decided to go out again by herself. As she walked towards the main road Imiela grabbed her, put his hand over her mouth, dragged her onto wasteground and sexually assaulted her, the court heard.

He threatened her with a brick, said he would kill her and repeatedly punched her in the face, jurors were told. After the attack Mrs Jankowitz's mother-in-law Jill Stevens said her clothes were dishevelled and had blood and grass stains on them and her face was bruised.

The attacker stopped her from looking at his face during the attack, it is claimed, but more than two decades later a cold case team matched Imiela's DNA to the alleged rape.

Imiela, originally from Appledore near Ashford in Kent, denies rape, indecent assault and buggery.

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DNA 'snared rapist 20 years later'

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DNA jab a safer test for babies

A new safe DNA test named T21 will be available worldwide within 12 months. Picture: Stuart Milligan Source: Herald Sun

A SIMPLE jab to screen for Down syndrome in unborn babies could provide relief to scores of pregnant Australians who are fearful of invasive, risky tests.

The prenatal blood test has been unveiled in Sydney with scientists claiming a diagnosis rate of 99.1 per cent.

Women's DNA is analysed to detect chromosomal abnormalities including Down syndrome from 10 weeks.

The screening test has the potential to reduce the need for invasive diagnostic testing for 99 per cent of people who are having them, said one of the lead scientists, Prof Rossa Chiu, from the The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Pregnant women are often fearful of amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling, which carry up to a 1 per cent risk of miscarriage.

The safeT21 test, presented at the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia conference, will be available worldwide within 12 months.

The Australian introduction is dependent on government regulators but it is being used in high-risk cases in the US, Hong Kong and China alongside existing screening methods.

The test comes after scientists discovered babies released DNA into their mother's blood plasma during pregnancy.

Prof Chiu recommends women who test positive for chromosomal abnormalities still have the invasive tests due to the 0.1 per cent false positive rate.

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DNA jab a safer test for babies

Posted in DNA

DNA tests approved in Gonstead murder case

DEE J. HALL | Wisconsin State Journal | dhall@madison.com | 608-252-6132 | @DeeJHall madison.com | Posted: Sunday, March 11, 2012 9:00 am

Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne approved a new round of DNA testing in a 1994 murder case the Wisconsin Innocence Project says could prove Penny Brummers innocence.

The project seeks to test victim Sarah Gonsteads clothes, swabs from her body, fingernail scrapings, a tissue found near the body and a Taco Bell cup. Ozanne said his office will make the evidence available for testing at Brummers expense.

Gonstead, 21, of Madison was found April 9, 1994, near Mineral Point Road west of Pine Bluff three weeks after she disappeared. She was last seen the night of March 14, 1994, when she went bar-hopping with Brummer, then 25. Brummer testified she dropped Gonstead off around 11 p.m. behind a bar on East Washington Avenue and last saw her standing near a group of people in a nearby Taco Bell parking lot.

According to the motion filed in Dane County Circuit Court, the clothes and underwear worn by Gonstead contain never-before-tested blood stains that do not appear to have come from the .22-caliber bullet wound to the head that killed her.

The case against Brummer was circumstantial. Prosecutors argued that after a night of drinking, Brummer, of Spring Green, killed Gonstead because of jealousy or because Gonstead had been advising Brummers ex-girlfriend to start dating men again.

Suspicion grew when a .22-caliber revolver that belonged to Brummers father couldnt be found during a search of the family home, and after Brummer and Gonstead were identified as having been at a bar that night near where the young womans body was found. Brummer earlier denied the two had been at the bar but later conceded to police she may have blacked out from a night of heavy drinking.

The defense maintains Gonstead met her killer after Brummer dropped her off. At trial, Brummers side produced a witness who said he saw a man two nights after Gonstead disappeared with a bright pink object on the side of Mineral Point Road close to where Gonsteads body clad in a purple and pink jacket was later found.

The state produced no physical evidence, confession or eyewitnesses to the murder, Innocence Project attorney John Pray argued in the motion. Evidence that a persons DNA is on multiple pieces of evidence and this DNA not belonging to Brummer would strongly suggest that someone other than Brummer was the perpetrator of this crime.

Ozanne said state law requires him to turn over evidence for DNA testing at the defendants expense in cases in which the results could be relevant to a claim of innocence.

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DNA tests approved in Gonstead murder case

Posted in DNA

Investigators using 'touch DNA' to solve property crimes

A thief wearing gloves walks into a parking lot, perhaps using the cover of night, smashes a car window and takes what's inside the vehicle, all in a matter of minutes.

It's the general technique for many car burglaries, and thousands of them occur in Harris County every year. Besides shattered glass, often there's not much visible evidence left at the scene, leaving investigators with few clues to catch the culprits.

But sometimes it's what investigators cannot see that helps solve many of these types of crimes.

For the last few years, the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences aided area law enforcement in solving property crimes by testing evidence for "touch DNA" - microscopic skin cells containing DNA that naturally rub off when an object, like a car steering wheel, is touched. The technology can be used even if the suspect is wearing gloves because there's a high likelihood the skin cells were transferred onto the gloves when the perpetrator was slipping them on.

"It was a pretty incredible tool for us to have to identify some of these suspects," said Sgt. Terry Wilson, of the Harris County Sheriff's Office auto-theft division. "These (burglary of a motor vehicle) cases are some of the hardest cases for law enforcement to solve because there's almost never any eyewitnesses. There's very rarely any good evidence left behind, fingerprint evidence and things like that, and once we started recovering some of this DNA, it was pretty exciting there for a while."

DNA testing is a practice typically reserved for personal crimes like rape and murder. However, the forensic institute, formerly the medical examiner's office, has also been performing DNA testing on evidence - containing either skin cells or bodily fluids, like blood and saliva - from property crime cases such as car break-ins and home invasions.

Thousands of matches

Since January 2008, the forensic institute made more than 3,000 matches to crime suspects in the FBI's Combined DNA Index System database, or CODIS, a national database used to store DNA profiles. Of those, about 75 percent were for property crime cases.

Dr. Roger Kahn, director of the forensic genetics laboratory at the institute, said the crime lab is one of the few equipped to handle DNA testing for property crimes. The lab has no testing backlog on personal crime cases, so it can focus on property crimes, he said.

Kahn noted that when the forensic institute moves to its new expanded facility in the fall, the lab will have the capabilities to perform DNA testing in property crime cases for not only law enforcement agencies in the county, but the entire region.

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Investigators using 'touch DNA' to solve property crimes

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DNA is solving property crimes

A thief wearing gloves walks into a parking lot, perhaps using the cover of night, smashes a car window and takes what's inside the vehicle, all in a matter of minutes.

It's the general technique for many car burglaries, and thousands of them occur in Harris County every year. Besides shattered glass, often there's not much visible evidence left at the scene, leaving investigators with few clues to catch the culprits.

But sometimes it's what investigators cannot see that helps solve many of these types of crimes.

For the last few years, the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences aided area law enforcement in solving property crimes by testing evidence for "touch DNA" - microscopic skin cells containing DNA that naturally rub off when an object, like a car steering wheel, is touched. The technology can be used even if the suspect is wearing gloves because there's a high likelihood the skin cells were transferred onto the gloves when the perpetrator was slipping them on.

"It was a pretty incredible tool for us to have to identify some of these suspects," said Sgt. Terry Wilson, of the Harris County Sheriff's Office auto-theft division. "These (burglary of a motor vehicle) cases are some of the hardest cases for law enforcement to solve because there's almost never any eyewitnesses. There's very rarely any good evidence left behind, fingerprint evidence and things like that, and once we started recovering some of this DNA, it was pretty exciting there for a while."

DNA testing is a practice typically reserved for personal crimes like rape and murder. However, the forensic institute, formerly the medical examiner's office, has also been performing DNA testing on evidence - containing either skin cells or bodily fluids, like blood and saliva - from property crime cases such as car break-ins and home invasions.

Thousands of matches

Since January 2008, the forensic institute made more than 3,000 matches to crime suspects in the FBI's Combined DNA Index System database, or CODIS, a national database used to store DNA profiles. Of those, about 75 percent were for property crime cases.

Dr. Roger Kahn, director of the forensic genetics laboratory at the institute, said the crime lab is one of the few equipped to handle DNA testing for property crimes. The lab has no testing backlog on personal crime cases, so it can focus on property crimes, he said.

Kahn noted that when the forensic institute moves to its new expanded facility in the fall, the lab will have the capabilities to perform DNA testing in property crime cases for not only law enforcement agencies in the county, but the entire region.

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DNA is solving property crimes

Posted in DNA

DNA blunder rape case is dropped

9 March 2012 Last updated at 07:32 ET

A rape case is being reopened after a DNA mistake which led to a man being wrongly accused of a sex attack in Manchester.

The man was due to stand trial accused of raping a woman at Plant Hill Park in Blackley last October.

But it has emerged that the DNA sample was contaminated in the laboratories of a company called LGC Forensics.

Greater Manchester Police is reviewing some cases in which the same company processed forensic evidence.

GMP Assistant Chief Constable Steve Heywood said the force was made aware on Tuesday that the DNA profile provided by LGC Forensics was "contaminated during the testing process in their laboratories".

The force contacted the Crown Prosecution Service which dropped the case.

Mr Heywood said: "Our sympathies and thoughts are with the victim who has been through a traumatic ordeal.

"This is clearly an upsetting time and we are doing all we can to support her.

"The exact circumstances of how the sample was contaminated at the laboratory are yet to be established but I am determined to discover what has occurred.

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DNA blunder rape case is dropped

Posted in DNA

Exercise and caffeine have beneficial effects on DNA

While our DNA is determined at conception, researchers reporting in the March issue of Cell Metabolism, say that we can beneficially alter our DNA molecules in a matter of minutes, simply by exercising. Furthermore, caffeine may also offer similar effects.

The research highlighted that, while our underlying genetic code remains the same, exercise does chemically and structurally alter the DNA molecules within our muscles. "Our muscles are really plastic," said Juleen Zierath of Sweden's Karolinska Institutet. "We often say 'You are what you eat'. Well, muscle adapts to what you do. If you don't use it, you lose it, and this is one of the mechanisms that allows that to happen."

The precise DNA changes are known as epigenetic modifications, which are modifications to the genome that do not involve a change in the nucleotide sequence of DNA (A, G T, and C), but result in changes in function by altering the expression of certain genes. In this case, it involves the gain or loss of chemical marks on DNA.

The study revealed that after a burst of exercise, our DNA bears fewer chemical marks (specifically methyl groups) than it did before exercise. The researchers say the changes occur in stretches of DNA that are involved in turning "on" genes important for muscles' adaptation to exercise.

The researchers also witnessed a similar loss of DNA methyl groups when making muscles contract in lab dishes. Surprisingly enough, they also observed the same effect when exposing the muscle to caffeine. Zierath explained that the effect of caffeine classically mimics the muscle contraction that occurs when we exercise.

This doesn't mean we should start drinking jugs of coffee and quit our gym subscription, however mixing the two may prove a worthy result. It is more likely that, however, that the findings could lead to new caffeine-based medicines that provide benefits similar to that of exercise.

Source: Cell Metabolism

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Exercise and caffeine have beneficial effects on DNA

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Denver: DNA tests link convicted killer to other murders

DENVER -- Authorities all along had the DNA evidence to link a convicted triple-murderer to three additional murders from 1979, and they say he could have been responsible for as many as 20 slayings.

But the process of developing an identifying DNA '' fingerprint" was still five years away when authorities say Vincent Groves killed a prostitute, a banker, and a store clerk.

By the time Groves had been let out of prison in 1987 and went on a suspected killing spree that left police discovering a body a month in and around Denver for about a year, authorities were still struggling with how to handle DNA. Colorado was the first state to require DNA but only from sex offenders in 1988 and the FBI's national database was a decade away from becoming fully operational.

On Wednesday, Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey announced that through federal grants for a cold case unit in the Denver Police Department and his office, four slayings had been solved though DNA matches.

Groves, who died in prison in 1996 at age 42, was tied by DNA to the 1979 killings of women found strangled and partially nude in an alley, an industrial park and a bathtub in Denver. Police used a DNA profile of Groves they recently found from an old murder investigation and linked it to the four separate crime scenes, authorities said.

"So often times, a serial offender can fly below the DNA radar screen, maybe leaving DNA, but because their criminal

The 1979 slayings of Emma Jenefor, 25; a store clerk in a tony area of Denver; Joyce Ramey, 23, a suspected prostitute, and Peggy Cuff, 20, a banker, bore strong resemblances to Groves' past killings and the disappearance of a woman that Groves was suspected in, authorities said. Police also linked Groves to the 1988 strangulation death of Pamela Montgomery, 35, a suspected prostitute found dead in an alley.

Groves would target women he knew who were addicted to cocaine or prostitutes he picked up on Colfax Avenue, a street in Denver historically known for prostitution, said Morrissey and Mylous Yearling, cold-case investigator for Denver's police department.

Groves strangled most of his victims; many were found nude or partially clothed, left in the mountains west of Denver, alleys and fields outside the city, police said.

When he died, Groves was serving a life sentence for the 1980s strangling of two young women. He had been released on parole in 1987 after serving five years in prison for killing a third woman in suburban Denver.

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Denver: DNA tests link convicted killer to other murders

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Police link woman's DNA to remains of long-missing brother

Every day for the past 27 years, Becky Sager Guess prayed about the whereabouts of her 30-year-old brother, who vanished after making a withdrawal from a northwest Harris County bank on June 7, 1984.

She feared for her brother, George "Bud" Sager Jr., but says police refused to investigate his disappearance as a missing persons case. Sager's pickup was discovered abandoned at a Conroe shopping center on July 3, but no clues were found in the truck, Guess said.

"It was devastating to me," said Guess, of Warren, Ark. "I didn't know what to do or where to go."

So she and other family members waited.

Guess finally got some answers in November after Thomas Duroy, a Montgomery County cold case squad detective, learned through DNA tests that a skull discovered in Walker County in 1989 was that of her brother, a former Harris County employee.

Guess had contacted Duroy after seeing a cable news program about cold case investigations.

"I just couldn't give up," said Guess, 60. "He was my little brother. I loved him."

Duroy said he was intrigued by the unique circumstances of the case.

Someone collecting cans discovered the skull along Interstate 45 on Dec. 18, 1989, and reported it, he said.

Inside the skull was a note. It said the skull was found in the woods but that the author could not get involved. Police have a scanned copy of the note, but haven't determined who wrote it.

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Police link woman's DNA to remains of long-missing brother

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New Type of DNA Discovered?

Small circles of extrachromosomal DNA appear to be widespread in mammals, and may be byproducts of small deletions in the nuclear DNA of somatic cells.

A newly identified form of DNAsmall circles of non-repetitive sequencesmay be widespread in somatic cells of mice and humans, according to a study in this weeks issue of Science. These extrachromosomal bits of DNA, dubbed microDNA, may be the byproducts of microdeletions in chromosomes, meaning that cells all over the body may have their own constellation of missing pieces of DNA.

Its an intriguing finding, said James Lupski, a geneticist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston who did not participate in the research. Most DNA studies use cells drawn from blood, but that snapshot of a persons genome may not be giving a complete picture, Lupski explained, if cells in other organs have their own set of chromosomal snippets missing.

But the findings do not surprise Sabine Mai, who studies genomic instability at the University of Manitoba. Extrachromosomal DNA is a well-studied phenomenon in cells ranging from plants to humans, she says. This research is just renaming an old phenomenon, previously referred to small polydispersed DNA. Small circles of DNA have been identified before, Mai says, though new deep sequencing techniques will allow for a deeper characterization of these extrachromosomal snippets.

Anindya Dutta, who studies DNA replication at the University of Virginia, and his colleagues were aiming to investigate intrachromosomal shuffling of genes in mouse brain tissuewhere recombination at homologous sequences could create extra loops of DNAbut the widespread nature, size, and sequences of the DNA they turned up surprised them.

After purifying the nuclear DNA from mouse brain tissue samples, the researchers targeted and digested the linear DNA, leaving only circular pieces behind. After enriching and sequencing the circular DNA, the scientists saw that they the circles tended to be small, most 200-400 base pair long, and non-repetitive. Dutta argues that this distinguishes them from previously characterized extrachromosomal circles, like small polydispersed DNA, which are often enriched for repeated sequences. They repeated the experiment with other mouse tissues and human cell lines.

Going back to the linear DNA they had originally discarded, Duttas group was able to correlate microDNAs with specific locations where microdeletions had occurred, suggesting that bits of DNA were being excised from the genome and forming independent circles. If true, that would mean that somatic tissues are subject to a higher and more widespread degree of mosaicism than previously thought, said Dutta, meaning that the genomic DNA in the cells of a given tissue dont all match.

Such a phenomenon could explain certain difficulties in identifying disease-causing alleles, Dutta said. If a microdeletion in some brain cells has disrupted a gene and contributed to cognitive decline, for example, thoroughly sequencing all the cells in your blood wont identify the genetic culprit.

Its unclear what processes underlie microDNA formation, but its most likely they occur during DNA replication or repair. Beyond that, the researchers determined that microDNAs are rich in cytosines and guanines, and tend to cluster at the 5 untranslated areas, exons, and CpG islands. To Dutta, this information suggests the possibility that nucleosomes important for gene regulation may be involved. These tend to be fall in the 5 end of genes, and DNA wrapping could explain microDNA size, which roughly corresponds to the length of DNA entwined on a nucleosome. What DNA repair processes are being used to produce microDNA is ripe for investigating, said Dutta.

Lupski would also like to see data surveying how microDNAs vary across the population, which could lend clues to the potential consequences of widespread microdeletions in somatic tissues. Though this will be a difficult undertaking in human populations, the apparent ubiquity of microdeletions has serious implications for DNA replication and repair, Dutta agreed. Its not as perfect as we tend to believe; its sloppy.

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New Type of DNA Discovered?

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DNA links deceased Colo. serial killer to 3 other murders

Authorities all along had the DNA evidence to link a convicted triple-murderer to three additional murders from 1979, and they say he could have been responsible for as many as 20 slayings.

But the process of developing an identifying DNA fingerprint was still five years away when authorities say Vincent Groves killed a prostitute, a banker, and a store clerk.

By the time Groves had been let out of prison in 1987 and went on a suspected killing spree that left police discovering a body a month in and around Denver for about a year, authorities were still struggling with how to handle DNA. Colorado was the first state to require DNA but only from sex offenders in 1988 and the FBIs national database was a decade away from becoming fully operational.

On Wednesday, Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey announced that through federal grants for a cold case unit in the Denver Police Department and his office, four slayings had been solved though DNA matches.

Groves, who died in prison in 1996 at age 42, was tied by DNA to the 1979 killings of women found strangled and partially nude in an alley, an industrial park and a bathtub in Denver. Police used a DNA profile of Groves they recently found from an old murder investigation and linked it to the four separate crime scenes, authorities said.

So often times, a serial offender can fly below the DNA radar screen, maybe leaving DNA, but because their criminal history occurred at a time when they werent eligible to go into the database or there was no database, they stay at large continuing to commit their crimes, Morrissey said.

The 1979 slayings of Emma Jenefor, 25; a store clerk in a tony area of Denver; Joyce Ramey, 23, a suspected prostitute, and Peggy Cuff, 20, a banker, bore strong resemblances to Groves past killings and the disappearance of a woman that Groves was suspected in, authorities said. Police also linked Groves to the 1988 strangulation death of Pamela Montgomery, 35, a suspected prostitute found dead in an alley.

Groves would target women he knew who were addicted to cocaine or prostitutes he picked up on Colfax Avenue, a street in Denver historically known for prostitution, said Morrissey and Mylous Yearling, cold-case investigator for Denvers police department.

Groves strangled most of his victims; many were found nude or partially clothed, left in the mountains west of Denver, alleys and fields outside the city, police said.

When he died, Groves was serving a life sentence for the 1980s strangling of two young women. He had been released on parole in 1987 after serving five years in prison for killing a third woman in suburban Denver.

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DNA links deceased Colo. serial killer to 3 other murders

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DNA evidence links convicted killer to more murders

DENVER Authorities all along had the DNA evidence to link a convicted triple-murderer to three additional murders from 1979, and they said he could have been responsible for as many as 20 slayings. But the process of developing an identifying DNA `' fingerprint" was still five years away when authorities said Vincent Groves killed a prostitute, a banker, and a store clerk.

By the time Groves had been let out of prison in 1987 and went on a suspected killing spree that left police discovering a body a month in and around Denver for about a year, authorities were still struggling with how to handle DNA. Colorado was the first state to require DNA but only from sex offenders in 1988 and the FBI's national database was a decade away from becoming fully operational.

On Wednesday, Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey announced that through federal grants for a cold case unit in the Denver Police Department and his office, four slayings had been solved though DNA matches.

Groves, who died in prison in 1996 at age 42, was tied by DNA to the 1979 killings of women found strangled and partially nude in an alley, an industrial park and a bathtub in Denver. Police used a DNA profile of Groves they recently found from an old murder investigation and linked it to the four separate crime scenes, authorities said.

"So often times, a serial offender can fly below the DNA radar screen, maybe leaving DNA, but because their criminal history occurred at a time when they weren't eligible to go into the database or there was no database, they stay at large continuing to commit their crimes," Morrissey said.

The 1979 slayings of Emma Jenefor, 25; a store clerk in a tony area of Denver; Joyce Ramey, 23, a suspected prostitute, and Peggy Cuff, 20, a banker, bore strong resemblances to Groves' past killings and the disappearance of a woman that Groves was suspected in, authorities said. Police also linked Groves to the 1988 strangulation death of Pamela Montgomery, 35, a suspected prostitute found dead in an alley.

Groves would target women he knew who were addicted to cocaine or prostitutes he picked up on Colfax Avenue, a street in Denver historically known for prostitution, said Morrissey and Mylous Yearling, cold-case investigator for Denver's police department.

Groves strangled most of his victims; many were found nude or partially clothed, left in the mountains west of Denver, alleys and fields outside the city, police said.

When he died, Groves was serving a life sentence for the 1980s strangling of two young women. He had been released on parole in 1987 after serving five years in prison for killing a third woman in suburban Denver.

Authorities launched a task force in the late 1980s to investigate a string of slayings after authorities began finding an average of a body a month, all possibly killed by the same person, Morrissey said. At that time, Groves was suspected of up to 20 killings between 1979 and 1988, he said. In one case from 1980, investigators had seminal fluid, but could only develop a blood type from the sample.

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DNA evidence links convicted killer to more murders

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