GUILT BY GENETIC ASSOCIATION: THE FOURTH AMENDMENT AND THE SEARCH OF PRIVATE GENETIC DATABASES BY LAW ENFORCEMENT

被引:0
|
作者
Abrahamson, Claire [1 ]
机构
[1] Fordham Univ, Sch Law, Bronx, NY 10458 USA
关键词
4TH AMENDMENT; DNA; PROPERTY;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Over the course of 2018, a number of suspects in unsolved crimes have been identified through the use of GEDMatch, a public online genetic database. Law enforcement's use of GEDMatch to identify suspects in cold cases likely does not constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment because the genetic information hosted on the website is publicly available. Transparency reports from direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic testing providers like 23andMe and Ancestry suggest that federal and state officials may now be requesting access to private genetic databases as well. Whether law enforcement's use of private DTC genetic databases to search for familial relatives of a suspect's genetic profile constitutes a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment is far less clear. A strict application of the third-party doctrine suggests that individuals have no expectation of privacy in genetic information that they voluntarily disclose to third parties, including DTC providers. This Note, however, contends that the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Carpenter v. United States overwhelmingly supports the proposition that genetic information disclosed to third-party DTC providers is subject to Fourth Amendment protection. Approximately fifteen million individuals in the United States have already submitted their genetic information to DTC providers. The genetic information held by these providers can reveal a host of highly intimate details about consumers' medical conditions, behavioral traits, genetic health risks, ethnic background, and familial relationships. Allowing law enforcement warrantless access to investigate third-party DTC genetic databases circumvents their consumers' reasonable expectations of privacy by exposing this sensitive genetic information to law enforcement without any meaningful oversight. Furthermore, individuals likely reasonably expect that they retain ownership over their uniquely personal genetic information despite their disclosure of that information to a third-party provider. This Note therefore asserts that the third-party doctrine does not permit law enforcement to conduct warrantless searches for suspects on private DTC genetics databases under the Fourth Amendment.
引用
收藏
页码:2539 / 2588
页数:50
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Association Rules Mining of Novel Genetic Algorithm based on image databases
    Gao, Li
    Zheng, Shijue
    Dai, Shangping
    Gamage, Shanthi
    IMECS 2007: INTERNATIONAL MULTICONFERENCE OF ENGINEERS AND COMPUTER SCIENTISTS, VOLS I AND II, 2007, : 850 - +
  • [32] Guilt by Association: Inflammation and Shared Genetic Risk Between Stress-Related and Immune Disorders
    Miller, Andrew H.
    Binder, Elisabeth B.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 180 (04): : 259 - 261
  • [33] Mining association rules from databases with continuous attributes using Genetic Network Programming
    Taboada, Karla
    Gonzales, Eloy
    Shimada, Kaoru
    Mabu, Shingo
    Hirasawa, Kotaro
    Hu, Jinglu
    2007 IEEE CONGRESS ON EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION, VOLS 1-10, PROCEEDINGS, 2007, : 1311 - 1317
  • [34] Privacy preserving association rule mining over distributed databases using genetic algorithm
    Bettahally N. Keshavamurthy
    Asad M. Khan
    Durga Toshniwal
    Neural Computing and Applications, 2013, 22 : 351 - 364
  • [35] Hierarchical association rule mining in large and dense databases using Genetic Network Programming
    Gonzales, Eloy
    Shimada, Kaoru
    Mabu, Shingo
    Hirasawa, Kotaro
    Hu, Jinglu
    PROCEEDINGS OF SICE ANNUAL CONFERENCE, VOLS 1-8, 2007, : 2677 - 2684
  • [36] Genetic Network Programming with Parallel Processing for Association Rule Mining in Large and Dense Databases
    Gonzales, Eloy
    Shimada, Kaoru
    Mabu, Shingo
    Hirasawa, Kotaro
    Hu, Jinglu
    GECCO 2007: GENETIC AND EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION CONFERENCE, VOL 1 AND 2, 2007, : 1512 - 1512
  • [37] Privacy preserving association rule mining over distributed databases using genetic algorithm
    Keshavamurthy, Bettahally N.
    Khan, Asad M.
    Toshniwal, Durga
    NEURAL COMPUTING & APPLICATIONS, 2013, 22 : S351 - S364
  • [39] Ethical considerations when co-analyzing ancient DNA and data from private genetic databases
    Harney, Eadaoin
    Sirak, Kendra
    Sedig, Jakob
    Micheletti, Steven
    Curry, Roslyn
    Esselmann, Samantha Ancona
    Reich, David
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2023, 110 (09) : 1447 - 1453
  • [40] Privacy issues with DNA databases and retention of individuals' DNA information by law enforcement agencies: the holding of the European Court of Human Rights case S and Marper v. United Kingdom should be adapted to American Fourth Amendment jurisprudence
    Lwin, Michael
    INFORMATION & COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY LAW, 2010, 19 (02) : 189 - 222