Using these two points together:
From what I saw on the news, the DNA samples will only be identifiable by barcode in the lab. There is also a committee overseeing the project with a Judge as chairman.
I have no problem whatsoever with a national DNA database. Instead of seeing all the negatives that have being espoused on this thread, I'd rather look at the positives.
-Solving crimes much quicker
-Solving cold cases
-Just solving cases that might never otherwise be solved
-Preventing crime (I heard the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre on the radio yesterday talking about the huge number of rapes never solved, and how international evidence points to repeat offenders who don't get caught for ages as being a major issue)
I'd hazard a guess that if you polled victims (or their families) of serious crimes over the past 20 years, they'd be overwhelmingly in favour.
I'd say if AAM (just to use it as an example) was around when the wheel was invented, there'd be people on here saying it was a bad thing as it means the Gardai would be too quick to go after people they did'nt like for crimes they did'nt commit!!!
1) You are not taking any risk. No one has shown how a Garda or anyone else can misuse this data.
2) There is a huge benefit to society. If a friend of yours gets raped, the Gardai would have a good chance of identifying the culprit quickly. This is good for catching rapists and it frees up the Gardai to do other duties.
The rape argument seems to be the most emotive, as does murder. But, I've yet to see any figures on what the database would add to successful conviction.
What proportion of rape cases return a not guilty verdict on the basis of the difficulties with consent rather than an unknown or unproven rapist? We could have all the DNA in the world, but if most cases hinge on whether or not it was consentual rather than if it was the accused or not, then that seems to indicate we won't have a huge increase in convictions from the database.
Similarly murder, we don't have serial murderers here. We might, we could, but most murders are linked to criminal activity and domestic/family issues/feuds. So who did the crime isn't really in doubt, it is their motives.
So for me, before we are asked to give up privacy (and I understand some are more protective of theirs than others and that does not imply guilt, just, like me, I want the state out of my personal life as much as possible), what actual benefit will follow from this. Just how much Gardai time will be free now as a result of super fast convictions and what will they be doing with that time? If we can currently organise for Gardai to patrol roads to give tickets to cyclists and people using bus lanes, then surely we can free up time for investigating serious crime?
Is solving one rape case that would have never .
The system needs to be tested first. Not based on computer models or judicial oversight (PRISM has judicial oversight too), but like good tech companies who hand over new devices and systems to professional hackers to see what the exploits are. We know the was and is corruption with the Gardai, we need to know the system is 100% secure.