Two years ago, the experts at the Forensic Medicine laboratory were stunned when they heard the news. Saliva and semen sampled from several women raped on the route from Cali to Palmira matched the genetic profile of a model from Cali investigated by the Attorney General’s Office. The man, known for his statuesque body as Mister Colombia 2013, was captured under the weight of at least ten complaints. His biological samples, crossed with thousands of genetic tests kept by the State, gave him away (Read: Prosecutor’s Office proposes to create a bank with the genetic profile of all Colombians).
That method is the scientific hope of Néstor Humberto Martínez, Attorney General of the nation, to end impunity, a problem that leaves 99% of the country’s crimes unresolved. His idea, more words more words less, is to legalize the genetic bank of people linked to judicial processes that already operates in the country.

The United States has donated this tool to more than 50 countries. In 2002 it arrived in Colombia and based on its technology the genetic laboratories of Legal Medicine, the DIJIN and the CTI have built two banks, independent of each other. The first and most famous is in charge of searching for missing persons. Thanks to this tool, four years ago, the remains of nine victims of the Palace of Justice were identified.
The second is a kind of Excel list in which people indicted for specific cases are included by court order. It is estimated that it contains more than 15,000 genetic profiles, 90% of them from sexual offenders and the rest from people accused of crimes against life.
But their searches are half-hearted, because the majority of the prison population is not registered. Experts do not know whether or not to store the DNA of culprits for other types of crimes such as drug trafficking, corruption or theft, and are always faced with the dilemma of whether or not to include minors. This is what Martinez intends to regulate.
Full article and original source: El Espectador
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