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Germany: expansion of DNA testinga step towards genetic
registration
By Martin Kreickenbaum
24 February 2005
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When observing the latest discussions by German politicians
and the media about widening DNA testing, one is reminded of the
techniques of conditioned reflexes and the experiments undertaken
by the famous Russian scientist, Ivan Pavlov. Like the dog that
automatically starts to salivate at a signal that food is present,
the German political elite starts to drool each time a crime wins
public attention in order to demand tougher laws and penalties
and expand mass surveillance of the population. The recent murder
of celebrity boutique owner Rudolph Mooshammer is a case in point.
The police were able to quickly identify the murderer via a DNA
sample, and now the use of DNA analyses is to be drastically increased
by the authorities.
On the front line of this campaign are not just the regular
law-and-order apologists from the Christian Democratic Union (CDU)
and Christian Social Union (CSU)like the interior ministers
from Bavaria and Brandenburg, Günter Beckstein (CSU) and
Jörg Schönbohm (CDU)but also leading figures from
the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Along with federal Interior
Minister Otto Schily (SPD), the interior ministers from North
Rhine-Westphalia and Schleswig-Holstein, Fritz Behrens and Klaus
Buß, are all promoting a virtually unrestricted genetic
registration of the entire population.
In two separate judgements in 2000 and 2001, the German Constitutional
Court placed explicit restrictions on the recording of so-called
genetic fingerprints of criminal suspects. These hurdles
are now to fall by the wayside. The reservations of the judiciary
and the restriction of genetic records to criminal cases are now
considered to be obstacles by SPD and CDU/CSU politicians.
According to Otto Schily, DNA analyses should become
the standard for identification services during investigations.
A DNA test would thereby become the norm, together with classic
fingerprints and photos. The genetic fingerprint would be conducted
and savedeven for misdemeanours. In an interview on German
radio, Behrens confirmed these plans: Im talking about
every possible kind of crime, possibly even break-ins, when there
is the danger of repeat of the offence.
Behrens, Schily and the SPD speaker for national affairs in
the Bundestag (parliament), Dieter Wiefelspütz, regard the
juridical reservations as completely superfluous.
Wiefelspütz explained to the Rheinischen Post newspaper:
The Federal Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BKA), which
would be in charge of this data, is not a branch of the Mafia,
but an organisation of the democratic constitutional state.
The case of Mooshammer proved, however, that the authorities
did not adhere to the prescribed regulations. The accused, Herisch
H., voluntarily gave a DNA sample to the police years ago during
a separate investigation in which he was not charged with any
crime. According to the law, his test should have been thereafter
erased and not handed over to the BKA. The state attorney in Munich,
Peter Boje, belatedly justified the saving of this test, arguing
there remained a suspicion of a repeat offencea
category that does even exist in jurisprudence.
The planned changes make it possible for the police to make
arbitrary decisions about who should submit a sample for the purposes
of DNA analysis. Not only could every thief, under the auspices
of being a possible repeat offender, find his or her DNA analysis
in the offices of the BKA, but also every participant in a demonstration
who has been taken into custody by the police. In theory, the
samples can be held forever, as time limits for samples are not
envisaged by lawmakers. Up until now, the period has been regulated
by the internal guidelines of the BKA, which specify that DNA
data must be erased after 10 years if the person is no longer
suspected of criminal activity. In the case of prisoners, their
data has to be deleted on the day of their release.
A grand coalition for law and order
Notwithstanding the fact that the CDU/CSU-led state coalition
governments in Bavaria, Hesse and Hamburg want to introduce their
own legal initiatives for the expansion of DNA analyses in the
federal upper house of parliament (Bundesrat), their voices have
been submerged in a chorus from the SPD government camp calling
for more security.
The most reactionary forces in politics, such as Beckstein,
Schönbohm and the prime minister of Hesse, Roland Koch (CDU),
no longer have to push the SPD to the right. The latter have already
taken up the policies of their one-time opponents. Fritz Behrens
and Klaus Buß are running in upcoming state elections, and
for them the debate on internal security has come
just in the nick of time, allowing them to take the wind out of
the sails of the conservative parties. However, even SPD chairman
Franz Müntefering and German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
have in the meantime announced their support for the expansion
of DNA tests.
The federal minister for justice, Brigitte Zypries (SPD), quickly
abandoned her initial opposition, explaining that in principle
she agreed with the measures, and announced the introduction of
her own bill. According to a report by the Tagesschau on
the public ARD television network, Zypries is aiming at a
secure, sensible use of genetic fingerprints and demanded
only that the reforms be used in relation to investigation
of a possible future crime. This would
give the police a free hand to arbitrarily carry out DNA tests
that could be called up at any time on the mere suspicion that
someone might carry out a crime sometime in the future.
The misgivings of Zypries are not based on concerns over the
infringement of democratic rights, but rather on the fear that
the German Constitutional Court could rule more sweeping changes
to the DNA Identification Law null and void.
The initial reservations of the German Green Party about the
massive attacks against individual liberties have also evaporated.
Although the Greens originally argued that they saw no reason
for new regulations, they have largely declared themselves ready
to support the expansion of DNA testing. The partys parliamentary
speaker, Reinhard Bütikofer, explained that the Greens were
essentially in agreement with expanding the catalogue of offences
and overcoming juridical objections when the suspect voluntarily
agrees to a DNA test.
It wasnt so long ago, in 1998, that the Greens, then
in opposition, were vehemently opposed to the introduction of
recording genetic data. At the time, a single criminal casethe
murder of Christina Nytsch and the use of mass genetic tests during
the investigationwas used to establish a DNA database at
the BKA.
Data privacy objections brushed aside
Privacy objections to the expansion of DNA testing are simply
being brushed aside. Even concerns about errors and misrepresentations
are not stopping the hardliners in leading state positions who
maintain that the existing state of affairs is a hindrance to
effective police work.
In fact, many current investigative procedures permit a DNA
test at the same time as regular fingerprints are takenwithout
having to apply separately for legal permission. In some states,
DNA samples are taken for minor thefts. There exists no legal
restriction in this regard.
Moreover, Schily, Behrens, Beckstein and Co. argue that genetic
fingerprints are no different than other identification methods
already in place and would therefore not represent any reduction
in individual rights. They reason that only the non-codeable part
of the genetic information would be extracted for identification,
making it impossible for any connection to be made to other personal
characteristics.
The German Constitutional Court, however, sees it differently.
They have made clear that the ascertainment, recording and
(future) use of DNA identification samples encroach upon
the basic right of information privacy. In other words:
the DNA test goes qualitatively beyond the classic fingerprint.
Data-privacy representatives from around the country have also
highlighted the fact that the non-codeable parts of DNA can enable
one to determine various characteristics about a person, including
gender, approximate age and ethnic origin, as well as some hereditary
diseases. In an interview with the Tageszeitung newspaper,
an expert from North Rhine-Westphalia, Bettina Sokol, warned against
the weakening of restrictions for DNA testing: A DNA analysis
is similar to a house search or telephone surveillance in the
way it represents an attack on basic rights.
Schilys argument loses complete touch with the facts
when he claims that the number of DNA analyses of citizens
would be in the range of a tenth of one percent.
In reality, the DNA analysis database at the BKA already contains
almost 400,000 records, 85 percent of which are for known persons
and 15 percent for unknown persons whose samples were taken at
crime scenes. Every month, a further 4,000 records are added.
In contrast, the current fingerprint records of the police number
around 3 million. Should the use of DNA testing become the norm,
it means that information on more than 4 percent of the German
population would immediately be available to the authorities.
A data-privacy expert from Bavaria, Reinhard Vetter, warned
in an interview with the Tageszeitung against a highhanded
expansion of data analysis. He said this was just the first
step towards the registration of the entire population. Such demands
are already being explicitly made. The interior minister for Brandenburg,
Jörg Schönbohm (CDU), proposed the recording of genetic
fingerprints for every male living in Germany.
The public is being led to believe that DNA tests are preventive
measures and will simplify investigation by prosecutors. During
the politics evening talk show Sabine Christiansen
on ARD, Günter Beckstein claimed that tens of thousands of
crimes could be solved and hundreds of sexual crimes prevented.
He was supported by such right-wing criminologists as Christian
Pfeiffer from the Lower Saxony Research Institute for Criminology.
The preventive effect of genetic fingerprints is nothing but
a pipe dream. Regular fingerprints and surveillance cameras can
be avoided through the wearing of gloves and facemasks. Likewise,
DNA traces can be made unusable through the littering of skin
and feather particles and the hair of other persons at the crime
scene. DNA analyses would not prevent any crimes; in the end it
is not a preventive but rather a reactive instrument. Furthermore,
it enormously increases the danger of abuse by police authorities:
misuse of data to the detriment of the defendant has already occurred
in the United States.
It is not just the risks of false prosecution that make genetic
fingerprints one of the most dangerous instruments in the arsenal
of the investigative authorities. Their use also reverses the
principle of presumption of innocence. Innocent bystanders who
unwittingly find themselves at the scene of a crime could suddenly
find themselves prosecuted by police due to traces of DNA they
have left behind. Irrespective of the concrete circumstance, DNA
analyses would be viewed as undeniable proof of complicity. An
incorrectly accused person would then be in a situation of having
to prove his or her innocence, in contrast to basic legal principles.
It will not be long before DNA tests are covered to include
even the most minor of offences, with politicians and the media
arguing that new criminology studies have shown that
sexual and violent criminals commenced by committing lesser crimes.
Here too, an expansion of DNA testing would not change anything,
let alone restrain violent criminal activity. Such knowledge has
been already been known for decades; only the forms of investigation
have changed.
Until the beginning of the 1970s, it was widely seen that specific
social conditionsmaterial want, an inadequate education
system, poor social infrastructure and a bleak outlook for the
futurewere the main factors behind criminal activity. Such
influences are increased manifold by the nature of the prosecution
and penal system itself, which actually reduces the potential
for rehabilitation. Based on these presumptions, concerns for
rehabilitation were brought to the foreground in the treatment
of criminals. It was during this period that theories emerged
arguing that a comprehensive social policy was the best form of
crime prevention.
The situation today is completely different. Instead of social
causes, personal characteristics are made responsible for criminal
pursuits. Such an argument logically leads to a biological portrait
of humans, according to which social problems such as poverty,
poor education, alcoholism and criminality are explained away
as the consequences of specific gene deficiencies.
The demand for an extensive DNA database not only arises from
this conception of humans, but is also designed to distract people
from their own social grievances. The promise of a high rate of
solved crimes with DNA analyses serves to divert attention from
the social causes of crime. It is not the social system that produces
poverty, crime, violence and brutalisation that should be viewed
as sick, but rather the single anti-social individual,
who, with the help of a central database, can be identified, registered
and weeded out. However, humans are social beings, and it is absolutely
absurd to look for abnormal behaviour like crime in genes.
Nor is it a biological reflex, like that of Pavlovs dogs,
that impels the ruling elite to call for more surveillance and
attacks on democratic rights, but rather an attempt to retain
their grip on power. At the same time that massive cuts are being
made in Germany to social welfare, unemployment benefits, the
education and health systems, and the entire infrastructure of
society, in order to satisfy the appetites of the international
finance markets, the ruling elite is prepared to hand out hundreds
of millions of euros for the strengthening of the police, the
construction of prisons and the establishment of a universal gene
database to monitor and control the population.
To maintain control of enormous social problems, which are
the product of the deepening crisis of the capitalist system,
the German establishment relies increasingly on repressive and
authoritarian forms of rule. The argument that violent crimes
can be contained through a gene database is only the pretext used
for the dismantling of democratic rights and the imposition of
police-state measures.
See Also:
Germany: 5 million unemployedworst
since World War II
[5 February 2005]
Germany: Hartz IV measures
begin to bite: Cheap labour, harassment, massive cuts in jobless
benefits
[21 January 2005]
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