Details
February 14, 2011 from 12:45 pm - 1:45 pm
Stanford Law School, Room 272 - Food will be served.
Journal Clubs are opportunities for informal discussion, in which students and faculty explore a topic of interest in law and the biosciences. This week, Jennifer Halbeib (SLS 2012) will facilitate discussion.
"Haskell v. Brown: The Legal Challenge to Mandated DNA Collection from Arrestees"
Under Proposition 69, California began collecting DNA in 2009 from every individual arrested for a felony. The ACLU challenged the law, arguing that warrantless collection of DNA from arrestees violates their Fourth Amendment rights. Can California require DNA samples from arrestees, presumed innocent and having a greater privacy interest than convicted felons, and if it can, will doing so help the states catch and convict more violent offenders?
"Haskell v. Brown: The Legal Challenge to Mandated DNA Collection from Arrestees"
Under Proposition 69, California began collecting DNA in 2009 from every individual arrested for a felony. The ACLU challenged the law, arguing that warrantless collection of DNA from arrestees violates their Fourth Amendment rights. Can California require DNA samples from arrestees, presumed innocent and having a greater privacy interest than convicted felons, and if it can, will doing so help the states catch and convict more violent offenders?
Readings:
Justice Department Opposes (Some) Gene Patents in the Myriad Appeal
It's Your DNA -- Or is it?
DNA Collection Legal, Effective
Contact
Center for Law and the Biosciences
clb@law.stanford.edu
Admission
Stanford Community-only