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Victims of unsolved sexual assaults committed prior to 1996 will now need to contact the Dallas Police Department should they wish for DNA analysis to be conducted in hopes of identifying their attackers. In a press release sent out today in advance of an afternoon press conference with Deputy Chief Craig Miller, DPD says that it was recently turned down for a federal grant that would allocate funds allowing the department to analyze DNA in cold cases regardless of the survivor’s involvement. Now, they need rape survivors to contact them should they want their cases re-opened.
While older cases are not prosecutable, a 2009 law allows law enforcement to update criminal histories to indicate their “involvement in a sexual assault offense.” Per the press release:
The Dallas Police Department’s Sexual Assault Cold Case Program, (SEACAP), began in 2001 and using DNA and fingerprint technology has solved 77 cases. Many survivors of this terrible crime never forget and no matter how long it has been they still want their cases solved. The Department realizes that even though offenders on older cases cannot be prosecuted due to Statute of Limitations restrictions, it is important for all concerned to have them identified.
That identification will no longer happen unless victims step up themselves and tell police they want DNA analysis done on their case. Despite the inability to prosecute, updating criminal records may provide peace of mind for victims and valuable information should offenders come into contact with law enforcement in the future. (Incidentally, this is all because rapes committed before 1996 had a five-year statute of limitations, whereas that policy was eliminated in 2001.)
Survivors of assault are asked to call the Cold Case Program at 214-671-3584. The full DPD release follows:
The Dallas Police Department’s Sexual Assault Cold Case Program,
(SEACAP), began in 2001 and using DNA and fingerprint technology has
solved 77 cases. Many survivors of this terrible crime never forget and
no matter how long it has been they still want their cases solved. The
Department realizes that even though offenders on older cases cannot be
prosecuted due to Statute of Limitations restrictions, it is important
for all concerned to have them identified.Prior to 1996 the Statute of Limitations for Sexual Assault was only
five years and unfortunately offenders involved in pre-1996 cases can no
longer be brought to trial. In 2001, though, the Statute of Limitations
for this crime was changed so that now when there is DNA evidence
available for testing and comparison there is no Statute of Limitations
restriction.In 2009, a group of survivors involved in the Cold Case Program, with
the assistance of State Representative Allen Vaught, State Senator John
Carona, the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office, and the Dallas
Police Department, made a proposal to the Texas legislature that a new
law be enacted related to older sexual assault cases. In September 2009,
that law was passed giving the state the authority to update an
offender’s criminal history to show that he was identified using DNA
technology as a perpetrator of a sexual assault even if there was no
actual conviction. As of this date, the criminal histories of thirteen
offenders have been changed under this law to indicate their involvement
in a sexual assault offense.Recently the department applied for a federal grant to assist in paying
for DNA analysis in older, non-prosecutable, sexual assaults, but the
application was not successful. The Dallas Police Department realizes,
however, that this analysis is very important to the community and
survivors and will continue to pursue these cases as circumstances
permit. The department invites any survivor of a still-unresolved sexual
assault offense that occurred prior to 1996 to contact us. With victim
involvement the department will do everything possible to solve each
case. Due to budget constraints, however, the department will
discontinue its procedure of analyzing older cases without the
survivor’s involvement. When future grant opportunities arise to assist
in funding this program the Department will begin analyzing all unsolved
cases.