Voters approved Proposition 69, supported by
Schwarzenegger, which will greatly expand the state's DNA database by
collecting genetic samples from anyone arrested for a felony,
regardless of whether they are convicted or later found innocent.
California voters have approved an expansion of the
state's DNA database via a ballot measure that police say keeps better
tabs on violent criminals. Civil libertarians say it borders on
invasion of privacy. Proposition 69 allows police to take DNA samples
from people convicted of any felony, rather than from a list of about
30 offenses designated under current law. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
and Attorney General Bill Lockyer, who endorsed the measure, called it
one of the most important crime-fighting laws in California history.
Police have solved at least 1,000 "cold" cases by matching crime scene
evidence such as hair and semen to banked DNA samples taken from
274,000 felons convicted of other crimes. Opponents of Prop. 69,
including the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Black Police
Association and the state Democratic Party, say the measure has a
dangerous side that takes effect in 2009. At that time, police are to
be allowed to take DNA samples from people arrested but not convicted
of felonies. ACLU officials say more than 50,000 felony arrests are
made in California that do not result in criminal charges. [more] and [more]]