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U.S. Supreme Court Rules Against Privacy Concerns in Maryland v. King; Jacksonville Criminal Defense Attorney Discusses Implications

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Jacksonville, FL (PRWEB) October 03, 2013

The U.S. Supreme Court handed down a decision earlier this year in Maryland v. King (2013 U.S. LEXIS 4165). The majority opinion in the case rules that police may take a DNA sample of any person arrested for a serious offense, and search to determine whether identical DNA has turned up associated with any other unsolved crime. The decision is a blow to privacy and an abandonment of critical principles of the Fourth Amendment, said Jacksonville criminal defense lawyer Bill Roelke.

“The Maryland v. King decision violates basic tenets of the constitutional protection against unreasonable searches and seizures: That police must have probable cause regarding a specific crime to conduct a search,” Roelke said. “This decision has potentially alarming ramifications.”

In 2009, Alonzo J. King was arrested in Maryland and charged with assault for allegedly pointing a shotgun at several people. After he was arrested, police used a cotton swab to collect his DNA, taking a sample from the inside of King’s cheek.

Police did this under a 1994 Maryland law that allows officers to take DNA samples of every person arrest for a crime of violence, and run it thorough a database to solve unsolved crimes. In King’s case, the search matched his DNA with semen found at the scene of a sexual assault in 2003. Prosecutors charged King with sexual assault and, using the DNA as their sole evidence, secured a conviction against him.

The Supreme Court case tested whether the Maryland law is constitutional under the Fourth Amendment, which protects people against unreasonable searches and seizures. In a narrow 5-4 decision, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority that the law is constitutional.

A swab inside the mouth is not sufficiently invasive to trigger privacy concerns, and a person who allegedly commits a dangerous act is not afforded the same level of privacy, Kennedy wrote. The majority opinion equates taking DNA with taking fingerprints, and suggests taking DNA is a means only for identification.

Justice Antonin Scalia dissented and was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. Scalia wrote the true reason for the DNA swab was not identification; it is to test the suspect for unrelated crimes without the hassle or standard of proof required for a warrant.

In 2009, Florida passed a law (Fla. Stat.


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