I note too my view on the issue aligns me with Justice Scalia, a more than rare event.
Arguments for this new legal twist say it gives law enforcement the ability to solve "cold cases" - unsolved crimes. Seems reasonable, say some - but it's a fundamental shift in how our legal system works.
"That, Scalia wrote, was the difference between DNA collection and fingerprints. Police take fingerprints primarily for identification, he explained. That’s acceptable because police must identify those they arrest. DNA, on the other hand, is collected for one reason only: “to solve unsolved crimes.” That is not acceptable, he wrote, because it’s exactly what the Fourth Amendment has always forbidden: a search of a person for evidence of a particular crime without any suspicion that he was the perpetrator."
Think of it this way - how would you define the basic function of Laws? Are they written to punish the guilty or to protect the innocent?
If you say "punish" then your view indicates a belief we are each of us best seen as criminals-in-waiting, Guilty until proven Innocent.
Great post. I completely agree with you and admire your matter-of-fact presentation.
ReplyDeleteThanks! This ruling is sure to be debated again - I hope!!
ReplyDeleteFirst; If you're not guilty of anything, why would you worry about giving DNA?
ReplyDeleteSecond; Are you not guilty until proven innocent? Think about it. Get arrested. If you can't make bail, you stay in jail until trial which can be months.
Anon - you are dangerously wrong and have zero understanding of Law.
ReplyDeleteIn every court case and arrest the burden of proof is not on the defendant but the prosecution, innocent until proven guilty is the standard in American law.
Your argument that only the guilty would seek to keep their DNA indentification private is likewise fallacious.
Your perspective is totally warped.