Government Uses Public DNA Database To Solve Murder Cold Case

A public DNA database was used to solve a murder cold case according to a report:

A family’s nearly two-decade wait to find out who killed their beloved daughter came to an end this month, as investigators announced an arrest in the cold case.

The Orlando Police Department said Monday that 38-year-old Benjamin L. Holmes was arrested in the murder of Christina Franke.

Franke was 25 and a student at the University of Central Florida majoring in education when she was found dead in her Audubon Park apartment in October 2001, according to FOX35. The college student had been robbed and assaulted, and her killer had left a large amount of DNA at the scene, police said.

Holmes was identified after the Orlando Police Department worked with Parabon Nanolabs to run a DNA sample to create a computer-generated composite of what Christine’s killer could look like. The composite initially didn’t come up with a match.

“We knew everything about his genetic make-up, but we did not know his name,” Detective Michael Fields said at a press conference.

But police worked with the company again and sent some DNA to Gedmatch, a public genealogy database. That’s when they got a match, after discovering that three of his family members had submitted their DNA to the database.

“We went out, we interviewed family members. We received DNA samples to compare against the killer’s DNA through kinship testing,” Fields said. “Through this testing we were able to shop the kinship relationship between the killer and other family members. We eliminated most of the family using DNA genealogy and narrowed down to Holmes and his brother.”

Authorities were able to use DNA from a discarded Gatorade bottle to eliminate Holmes’ brother. A cigar and beer can that investigators watched the 38-year-old toss provided DNA that turned out to be an exact match to the DNA found at the crime scene 17 years ago, according to an arrest warrant obtained by FOX35.

Police said that Holmes had prior arrests, but none of the crimes required law enforcement officers to get a DNA sample to put into a state database.

Fields added that there was no apparent connection between Franke and Holmes, but that the 25-year-old had likely come home from work with $300 in cash, which officers on the scene were not able to find.

“It’s safe to assume that he took the cash,” Fields said.

At a news conference announcing the arrest, Franke’s mother said she never thought she would know who killed her daughter.

“I honestly thought they would never find him,” Tina Franke said. “This is such a blessing for our family.”

Holmes has denied killing Franke, and is being held without bond in the Orange County Jail. (source, source)

Now, it is good that the case was finally solved. However, what is concerning here is the principle being applied.

In this case, a DNA database that ostensibly is NOT to be used by the government was just used by it.

It means that your DNA, the very thing that determines your biological constitution, is a commodity for sale. This is not a new trend, but an extension of an already existing one.

Who knows what else those “databases” are being used for? Likewise, it is a warning that no matter what any company says, there is a reason they are being promoted, just as Facebook was promoted for photos.

They are trying to market YOU, the individual, as a commodity for a larger purpose that what you are being offered in exchange.

It is something to watch for the future, because the potential implications of applications such as this are very far reaching, and in combination with video editing technologies that I have written about, the future would seem to be something out of a science fiction novel, where the most basic and established means for “verifying” evidence could be undermined and destroyed.

In such a world, truth will no longer exist, but only the will of the powerful against the rest.

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