Debbie Smith Act

Since 2004, the Debbie Smith Act has been helping to end the backlog of untested rape kits.


BREAKING: JULY 30, 2024

 

⭐ President Biden Reauthorized the Debbie Smith Act

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Twenty years after cosponsoring the original bill, President Biden signed into law the reauthorization of the Debbie Smith Act through fiscal year 2029.

This bill, championed by Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) and Rep. Ann Wagner (R-MO-2), reauthorizes the Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Grant Program which helps state and local governments improve the collection and analysis of DNA evidence, including evidence in sexual assault kits.

Since its initial passage in 2004, funding from the Debbie Smith Act has resulted in more than 300,000 hits on CODIS, the national DNA database system. 

NEXT: Urge Congress to fully fund the Debbie Smith Act

Now that the Debbie Smith Act has been reauthorized, it's time for Congress to allocate funding to the Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Grant Program. This funding helps law enforcement address the U.S.'s rape kit backlog by funding public crime laboratories to process DNA evidence from rapes and other violent crimes. This funding has aided in the arrest of violent offenders, including serial sexual offenders.

RAINN urges robust funding in the House and Senate appropriations bills to make this a sweeping victory for past and future survivors of sexual assault by fully funding the Debbie Smith Act.


About the Debbie Smith Act

DNA evidence is often critical for achieving justice in crimes of sexual violence, but there are still challenges in the way it’s used to hold perpetrators accountable. 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 backlog includes evidence never sent to a lab for testing, often called the "hidden backlog," as well as evidence that arrived at a crime lab but was never tested. The Debbie Smith Act, named after a survivor who eventually found justice through DNA evidence, was the nation’s first piece of legislation aimed at ending the backlog.

1. The Debbie Smith Act provides funding for crime labs to process DNA evidence

The Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Grant Program provides funding to support public crime laboratories’ work to build capacity and process DNA evidence, including evidence collected in rape kits. Since its enactment in 2004, the Debbie Smith Act has been renewed twice with overwhelming bipartisan support. While the Debbie Smith Act is authorized to provide up to $151 million in funding per year through Fiscal Year 2019, Congress appropriated just $117 million in FY 2015. Through amendments passed in 2013 as the SAFER Act, the Debbie Smith Act raised the minimum amount of funding that must go to testing and capacity-building activities. In addition, the Act supports audits of evidence awaiting analysis at law enforcement agencies and charges the Justice Department with the task of developing national testing guidelines.

2. The Debbie Smith Act requires that states create plans for the reduction of the backlog

The Debbie Smith Act distributes certain funds, often referred to as Debbie Smith grants, to all states. Grantees must comply with the rules that regulate distribution and use of funds, including creating explicit, transparent plans for the reduction of the backlog and meeting privacy standards when DNA evidence is collected from crime scenes or sexual assault forensic exams.

3. The Debbie Smith Act helps to strengthen the national DNA database used to help solve crimes

When forensic evidence is collected and processed, a DNA profile is developed and added to CODIS, the Combined DNA Index System. Law enforcement officials can compare this profile against state databases of convicted and arrested profiles in the hopes of finding a match. Every new sample that is added bolsters the database and increases the chance of convicting perpetrators of past, current, and future crimes.


Survivor Story: Debbie Smith

In 1989 Debbie Smith was sexually assaulted by a stranger who broke into her home. Although she underwent a sexual assault forensic exam, the DNA evidence went unanalyzed for over five years. In 1994, the forensic evidence was finally entered into CODIS, the FBI’s national database, and yielded a “hit” identifying the perpetrator. At the time, the perpetrator was already incarcerated, serving 161 years for robbing and abducting two women. He was brought to trial and eventually convicted for the rape of Debbie Smith.


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 at 800.656.HOPE (4673) or online at hotline.RAINN.org.


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The Rape Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN) website provides general information that is intended, but not guaranteed, to be correct and up-to-date. The information is not presented as a source of legal advice. You should not rely, for legal advice, on statements or representations made within the website or by any externally referenced Internet sites. If you need legal advice upon which you intend to rely in the course of your legal affairs, consult a competent, independent attorney. RAINN does not assume any responsibility for actions or non-actions taken by people who have visited this site, and no one shall be entitled to a claim for detrimental reliance on any information provided or expressed.

The rape kit backlog is currently one of the biggest obstacles to prosecuting perpetrators of sexual violence.

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