Chapter 355 |
2022 -- S 3039 Enacted 06/29/2022 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- SEXUAL ASSAULT EVIDENCE KITS |
Introduced By: Senator Tiara T. Mack |
Date Introduced: June 17, 2022 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby |
amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
CHAPTER 97 98 |
SEXUAL ASSAULT EVIDENCE KITS |
23-97-1 23-98-1. Short title. |
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Sexual Assault Evidence Kits Act". |
23-97-2 23-98-2. Definitions. |
For purposes of this chapter: |
(1) "Accredited laboratory" means a DNA laboratory that is formally recognized and meets |
or exceeds a list of standards, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) director's quality |
assurance standards, to perform specific tests, established by a nonprofit professional association |
of persons actively involved in forensic science that is nationally recognized within the forensic |
community in accordance with the provisions of the federal DNA Identification Act, 42 USC ยง |
14132, or other applicable law. |
(2) "Anonymous kit" or "unreported kit" means a kit that is collected from a victim of |
sexual assault through a medical forensic examination where the victim elects, at the time of the |
examination, not to report the sexual assault offense to a law enforcement agency. |
(3) "Combined DNA Index System (CODIS)" means the FBI's program of support for |
criminal justice DNA databases as well as the software used to run the databases. |
(4) "DNA analysis" means the isolation of autosomal deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) to |
develop DNA profiles that are eligible for entry into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS), |
DNA samples taken from evidence containing DNA from a known individual or of unknown origin, |
the determination of the DNA test results, and entry of resulting DNA profiles into CODIS. |
(5) "Law enforcement agency" means a local police department, the Rhode Island state |
police, the office of the attorney general, or a federal, state, or local governmental body that |
enforces criminal laws and maintains employees who have a statutory power of arrest. |
(6) "Medical forensic examination" means an examination of a sexual assault patient by a |
health care healthcare provider, ideally one who has specialized education and clinical experience |
in the collection of forensic evidence and treatment of these patients. Such examination may include |
gathering information from the patient for the medical forensic history,; an examination,; |
coordinating treatment of injuries,; documentation of biological and physical findings,; collection |
of evidence from the patient,; information, treatment, and referrals for sexually transmitted |
infections, pregnancy, suicidal ideation, alcohol and substance abuse, and other non-acute medical |
concerns,; and follow-up as needed to provide additional healing, treatment, or collection of |
evidence. |
(7) "Newly collected kit" means a kit that has been collected after time frames and |
requirements for testing kits were enacted. |
(8) "Previously untested sexual assault evidence kits" means human biological specimen(s) |
collected by a health care healthcare provider during a forensic medical examination from the |
victim of a sexually-oriented criminal offense that has not been through DNA analysis and has been |
held untested by medical facilities, law enforcement agencies, or accredited laboratories. |
(9) "Sexual assault evidence kit" or "kit" means a collection of human biological |
specimen(s) collected by a health care healthcare provider during a medical forensic examination |
from the victim of a sex offense. |
(10) "Status" means the location, date, and time when the kit is transferred within the chain |
of custody. |
23-97-3 23-98-3. Annual statewide inventory of sexual assault evidence kits. |
(a) Within one hundred eighty (180) days of the effective date of this chapter, and annually |
thereafter, all medical facilities, law enforcement agencies, crime laboratories, and any other |
facilities that receive, maintain, store, or preserve sexual assault evidence kits (kits) shall submit a |
report containing the following information to the department of health: |
(1) The total number of all untested kits in possession of each medical facility, law |
enforcement agency, crime laboratory, and any other facility that receives, maintains, stores, or |
preserves kits.; |
(2) For each kit the facility shall provide: |
(i) The category of the kit: |
(A) Whether sexual assault was reported to law enforcement; or |
(B) Whether the victim chose not to file a report with law enforcement. |
(ii) The status of the kit: |
(A) For kits of medical facilities: The date when the kit was reported to law enforcement, |
and the date when the kit was delivered to the state health laboratory; |
(B) For kits of a law enforcement agency: The date the kit was picked up from a medical |
facility, the date when the kit was submitted to a crime laboratory, and for any kit not submitted to |
a crime lab, the reason the kit was not submitted; |
(C) For kits belonging to another jurisdiction: The date that the jurisdiction was notified |
and the date the kit was picked up; and |
(D) For kits in possession of crime laboratories: The date the kit was received from law |
enforcement and from which agency the kit was received; the date when the kit was tested; the date |
when the resulting information was entered into CODIS or other relevant state or local DNA |
databases, and the reasoning, if applicable, that a kit was not tested or a DNA profile was not |
created.; |
(3) The total number of kits in possession of the entity for more than thirty (30) days or |
beyond the statutory time frame for kit submission and testing.; and |
(4) The total number of kits destroyed and the reason for destruction. |
(5)(b) The department of health shall compile the data from the reports in a summary |
report. The summary report shall include a list of all agencies or facilities that failed to participate |
in the preparation of the report. The annual summary report shall be made publicly available on the |
department of health's website, and shall be submitted to the governor, the speaker of the house of |
representatives, the president of the senate, and the office of the attorney general. |
(b)(c) Within ninety (90) days of the effective date of this chapter, all previously untested |
kits in medical facilities or other facilities that collect kits shall be submitted to the appropriate law |
enforcement agency. |
(c)(d) Within one hundred eighty (180) days of the effective date of this chapter, each law |
enforcement agency shall submit all previously untested kits, including those sexual assaults past |
the statute of limitations, to the accredited public crime laboratory or laboratories. |
(1) Anonymous or unreported kits are exempted from this section unless the victim files a |
report and consents to the testing of their kit. |
(2) Anonymous and unreported kits shall be safely stored by the state health laboratory in |
a manner that preserves evidence for a duration of ten (10) years or the applicable statute of |
limitations, whichever is greater. |
(3) Victims who do not file a report with law enforcement at the time the kit was collected |
shall not negate their right to report the crime and have the kit tested in the future. |
(d)(e) An accredited public crime laboratory shall test all previously untested sexual assault |
kits within ninety (90) days of receipt from the local law enforcement agency. |
(e)(f) Testing shall be pursued to develop autosomal DNA profiles that are eligible for |
entry into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) and local DNA databases. |
(1) With the goal of generating a CODIS-eligible DNA profile, if a laboratory is unable to |
obtain an autosomal CODIS-eligible DNA profile, the laboratory should evaluate the case to |
determine if any other DNA-typing results could be used for investigative purposes. |
(2) In cases where testing has resulted in a DNA profile, the laboratory shall enter the full |
profile into the Combined DNA Index System Database (CODIS) and local DNA databases. The |
average completion rate for this analysis and classification shall not exceed ninety (90) days. |
(3) If an accredited public crime laboratory is unable to meet the deadline set forth in |
subsection (e)(f)(2) of this section, the kits shall be outsourced for testing to an accredited private |
crime laboratory. |
23-97-4 23-98-4. Mandatory submission and testing requirements for newly collected |
sexual assault evidence kits. |
(a) Medical facilities and all other facilities that conduct medical forensic examinations |
shall notify the appropriate law enforcement agency immediately, and no later than twenty-four |
(24) hours after the collection of a new sexual assault evidence kit. |
(b) Hospitals and state laboratories shall work together to ensure reported kits are |
transferred from the hospital to the laboratory within ten (10) days of the kit being collected. |
(1) Anonymous kits and unreported kits are exempted from this section unless the victim |
files a report and consents to the testing of their kit. Anonymous kits shall be safely stored by the |
state laboratory in a manner that preserves evidence for a duration of ten (10) years or the applicable |
statute of limitations, whichever is greater;. |
(2) Victims who do not file a report with law enforcement at the time the kit was collected |
shall not negate their right to report the crime and have their kit tested in the future. |
(3) Kits associated with a reported crime that is uncharged or unsolved shall be preserved |
by the applicable law enforcement agency for fifty (50) years or the length of the applicable statute |
of limitations, whichever is greater. |
(c) Law enforcement shall contact the department of health when a victim of sexual assault |
files a police complaint. At that point, the department of health shall begin the forensic analysis. |
An accredited public crime laboratory shall test all kits within thirty (30) days of receipt. |
(1) Testing shall be pursued to develop autosomal DNA profiles that are eligible for entry |
into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) and local DNA databases, with the goal of |
generating a CODIS-eligible DNA profile. If a laboratory is unable to obtain an autosomal CODIS- |
eligible DNA profile, the laboratory shall evaluate the case to determine if any other DNA-typing |
results could be used for investigative purposes. |
(2) In cases where testing has resulted in a DNA profile, the laboratory shall enter the full |
profile into the Combined DNA Index System Database (CODIS) and local DNA databases. The |
average completion rate for this analysis and classification shall not exceed ninety (90) days. |
(3) If an accredited public crime laboratory is unable to meet the deadline specified in |
subsection (c)(2) of this section, untested kits shall be outsourced to an accredited private crime |
laboratory. |
23-97-5 23-98-5. Victims' rights to notice. |
(a) All victims of sexual assault shall have the right to: |
(1) Consult with a sexual assault victim advocate on a confidential and privileged basis |
during the forensic medical exam, and during any interview with law enforcement, prosecutors, or |
defense attorneys. Waiving the right to a victim advocate in one instance does not negate this right. |
The medical facility, law enforcement officer, or prosecutor shall inform the victim of his or her |
rights prior to commencement of a medical forensic examination or law enforcement interview, |
and shall not continue unless such right is knowingly and voluntarily waived; |
(2) Information, upon request, of the location, testing date, and testing results of a kit; |
whether a DNA profile was obtained from the kit; whether there are matches to DNA profiles in |
state or federal databases; and the estimated destruction date for the kit, all in a manner of |
communication designated by the victim; |
(3) Be informed when there is any change in the status of their case, including if the case |
has been closed or reopened; |
(4) Receive written notification, upon request, from the appropriate official with custody |
of a victim's sexual assault evidence kit not later than sixty (60) days before the date of the intended |
destruction or disposal; |
(5) Be granted further preservation of the kit or its probative contents; |
(6) Designate a person of the victim's choosing to act as a recipient of the information |
provided under this section; |
(7) Be informed about how to file a report with law enforcement and have their kit tested |
in the future, if the victim shall decide not to file a report at the time the kit is first collected; |
(8) Be informed about the right to apply for victim compensation; and |
(9) Be provided with the contact information for the designated liaison at the time that a |
kit is collected. |
(b) A survivor retains all the rights contained in this chapter at all times, regardless of |
whether the survivor agrees to participate in any investigation, prosecution, or generally, in the |
criminal justice system of any court of this state and regardless of whether the survivor consents to |
a medical evidentiary or physical examination to collect sexual assault forensic evidence. |
(c)(1) The attorney general, in consultation with the victim service providers and victim |
advocacy organizations, shall promulgate and publish a sexual assault victim's bill of rights for |
purposes of informing sexual offense victims of their rights under state law. Such bill of rights shall |
be prominently published on the department of the attorney general's website, in plain, easy to |
understand language and in at least the ten (10) most common languages spoken in this state, and |
distributed to hospitals as a document which shall be provided to every presenting sexual offense |
victim. The department of the attorney general may update the bill of rights as necessary to reflect |
changes in state law and more accurately explain the law. |
(2) In advance or at the beginning of the medical forensic examination and law enforcement |
interview, medical professionals, victim advocates, law enforcement officers, or prosecutors shall |
provide victims with the bill of rights as created by the attorney general identifying their rights |
under law, including the rights granted pursuant to this section. |
(d) The attorney general, in coordination with victim service providers, shall ensure that |
trauma-informed, survivor-focused, statewide policies and procedures for law enforcement shall |
be adopted concerning contact with victims and notification concerning kits. |
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC006163 |
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