Posted on 11/19/2017 8:41:02 AM PST by TaxPayer2000
Millions of people have handed their DNA over to genetic testing companies like Ancestry or 23andMe to learn more about their family trees.
But when you ship off your saliva, law enforcement could have access to your DNA.
Police could use genetic information it gets from those companies to identify you in a criminal investigation, even if youve never used one of those services.
Jacksonville resident Eric Yarham wanted to learn more about his family tree, so he mailed off his saliva to 23andMe.
Just trying to unravel the mystery that is your genetics, said Yarham, who lives in the Riverside area. That lingering 0.3 percent is sub-Saharan African. So thats swimming around in my DNA." Yarham had no idea police could request his genetic information.
Both 23andMe and Ancestry confirm your genetic information could be disclosed to law enforcement if they have a warrant.
Action News Jax asked 23andMe Privacy Officer Kate Black whether the company notifies customers about that possibility before they mail in their DNA. We try to make information available on the website in various forms, so through Frequently Asked Questions, through information in our privacy center, Black said.
According to the companys self-reported data, law enforcement has requested information for five American 23andMe customers.
So far, the company reports it has not turned over any information.
But Black said she wouldnt entirely rule it out in the future.We would always review a request and take it on a case-by-case basis, Black said.
Ancestry self-reports that it complied with a 2014 search warrant to identify a customer based on a DNA sample.
Spokespeople at the Jacksonville Sheriffs Office, the State Attorneys Office, the Public Defenders Office and the Florida Department Of Law Enforcement told Action News Jax they dont recall any local investigations in which genetic testing information was requested from a private company.
The departments said they dont know for sure.
The police make mistakes and I would rather not be on the unfortunate end of one of those mistakes, as a result of my DNA being somewhere that is unlucky, Yarham said.
But it doesn't even have to be your DNA; if a family member who shipped off their saliva to one of these companies, law enforcement can request their genetic information for familial matching.
They can see what the likelihood is of these certain alleles, of these genetic markers, matching up to make it -- likelihood of whether you were involved in, lets say, that criminal activity or not, said Jacksonville Dr. Saman Soleymani, who has studied genetics extensively and been an expert witness in local criminal cases.
Soleymani said he didn't take any chances when he sent his DNA to 23andMe. I literally sent my kit saying my name is Billy Bob, he added.
If you or a family member has sent in your genetic material to Ancestry or 23andMe, both companies allow you to delete your DNA results.
Request. The new word for demand with the full force of The State.
If you didn’t see this one coming...
Always thought handing over ones DNA to these stupid places was a bad idea.
anyone brilliant enough to give their freaking dna to a company that literally collects dna has probably stepped in front of a train by now.
Delete... What a joke...
So? They still need a warrant. This is a silly article.
I did a family tree as a elementary school project. Sure it’d be fun to have lineage back further, but the commercial from the DNA company I see most often says find out blah blah blah, then they add the word “possible” when talking of the results. ITs just guesses of your ancestry heritage. they sell a possibility.
Police could use genetic information it gets from those companies to identify you in a criminal investigation, even if youve never used one of those services.
BFL
“both companies allow you to delete your DNA results”
Ha ha ha! Much like you can “delete” anything else from Skynet. I wonder when folks wearing Fitbits are going to find out how that data is really being used.
I wonder if they look for criminal matches on all samples sent in. That would really be scary and they could be doing it now or NSA could have hacked their data base.
#ShockedFace
Hahahahahahahaha, you foolish sheeple! I've said from day one this was nothing but another invasion by Big Brother. There's no such thing as deletion. Once in the system, always in the system.
So? They still need a warrant.
They cant give what they dont have. Theres something even more insidious about the agreement with these outfits. They can sell your DNA to insurance and Big Pharma. You consent to that as a requirement of doing business with them.
They can patent your genes or check for a predisposition to certain conditions or diseases and price or deny you coverage based on the results.
L
“Yeah, god forbid you should be implicated in a crime you did.”
So The Fifth Amendment is a bother for you? But what the hell, we’re “safer” because of the violation of our rights, so it’s really o.k, right?
I have tested at the three main ones, and have looked at the results for perhaps a dozen people or more. Without having extensive family trees to look at, it seems I don’t understand how the results could help police very much.
Use fake information if you just want to find out your dna result.
If you want them to check your actual family background then use your name without saliva.
Could be.
With a warrant.
Nothing terribly new or exciting about that.
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