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The Debbie Smith Act of 2004 is widely regarded as one of the most important anti-rape laws in U.S. history. Passed as part of the Justice for All Act, it was the first federal legislation to address the nation’s backlog of untested rape kits. 

Status: Reauthorized Through FY2029

Twenty years after its inception, the Debbie Smith Act was reauthorized in July 2024 for an additional five years. President Biden, who cosponsored the original bill in 2004, signed this reauthorization into law, extending the Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Grant Program through FY2029.

Debbie Smith’s Story

In 1989, Debbie Smith was attacked by a masked stranger who entered her home in Williamsburg, Virginia. The perpetrator sexually assaulted her repeatedly, threatening her life if she reported the crime. 

Debbie underwent a sexual assault forensic exam (SAFE), and the DNA evidence was entered into the national DNA database, but investigators didn’t find a match—until 1995. That year, an imprisoned convictee’s DNA was at last entered into the database, where analysts got a cold hit—the fourth cold hit ever in the U.S. More than six years after the crime, DNA evidence identified the man who attacked Debbie.

Debbie’s courage and advocacy led to the creation and passage of the Debbie Smith Act of 2004, significantly reducing the backlog of untested rape kits nationwide and granting survivors long-awaited answers and justice.

DNA gave me back my life. I can’t think of any way to say it better because I had become a shell of a person. This test put a name to a face and gave me my life again.”

– Debbie Smith, in an interview with the National Center for Victims of Crime

About the Rape Kit Backlog

DNA evidence is often critical for achieving justice in crimes of sexual violence, but the backlog of unanalyzed DNA evidence, often referred to as the rape kit backlog, is a major impediment to prosecuting perpetrators of sexual assault. 

The rape kit backlog includes: 

About the Debbie Smith Act

The Debbie Smith Act was the nation’s first piece of legislation aimed at ending the backlog. Since its enactment in 2004, the Debbie Smith Act has been renewed four times with bipartisan Congressional support. The law’s key provisions include

1. Funding for Crime Labs

The Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Grant Program provides funding to public crime laboratories, enabling them to process more DNA evidence more quickly—including evidence collected in rape kits. 

The Debbie Smith Act is authorized to provide up to $151 million in funding per year, though Congress does not always appropriate the full amount. For instance, in fiscal year (FY) 2015, Congress appropriated only $117 million; in FY2023, it appropriated $130 million. The funds are distributed to all states.

In 2013, the Debbie Smith Act was amended through the SAFER Act. These amendments included:

2. Backlog Reduction

The Debbie Smith Act requires states to create plans for reducing their backlogs.

Grant recipients must comply with regulations, including: 

Since the Debbie Smith Act became law, over 645,000 DNA crime scene samples have been processed and added to CODIS, resulting in more than 300,000 matches as of 2024. 

Every hit represents the potential for concrete justice—justice that survivors might never have seen without this law.

3. A Stronger DNA Database

The Debbie Smith Act helps to strengthen CODIS, the Combined DNA Index System, which is the FBI’s national DNA database.

After forensic evidence is collected, it’s sent to a crime lab for processing. If the lab finds DNA, it develops a DNA profile and adds that profile to CODIS. Law enforcement officials can then look for a match by comparing the DNA profile against the hundreds of thousands of offender profiles already logged in state databases. 

Every time a new profile is added, it expands the database and increases the odds of securing convictions for perpetrators.

“DNA testing does take time. It’s not done as quickly as it is on TV. But what DNA yields is truth, and truth is worth the wait.”

Debbie Smith, in an interview with the National Center for Victims of Crime

Reauthorizing the Debbie Smith Act

Many laws require reauthorization at specific times. When authorization expires, Congress must pass a new bill to reauthorize the law. The Debbie Smith Act’s grant program has been reauthorized continually since 2004, each time with overwhelming bipartisan support.

The Timeline

Each reauthorization ensures that the push to clear rape kit backlogs will continue, offering hope for justice to thousands of survivors whose kits are still untested.

“This legislation is one of the best when it comes to serving victims of sexual assault and other violent crimes. It responds to questions that were thought insoluble, it identifies those who would remain nameless, and it exonerates those who have been wrongly accused. This bill solves crimes from the past while working in the present and building for the future. But most of all, it offers justice, resolution, and peace for victims. That is our government working at its best!

– Debbie Smith, survivor, advocate, and founder of H-E-A-R-T

How You Can Help

You can fight for justice by joining RAINN’s ongoing advocacy for a continually authorized, fully-funded Debbie Smith Act!

If you or someone you know has experienced sexual assault, you are not alone. RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Hotline offers free, confidential, 24/7 support in English and en Español.

 

Call 800.656.HOPE (4673)

Chat at hotline.RAINN.org

Text HOPE to 64673  

Get Help Now  

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