Application
section 40501 of this titleTo be eligible to receive a grant award under this chapter, an entity described in shall submit an application at such time and in such form as the Attorney General may reasonably require.
Contents
Privacy protections for biological family reference samples
In general
Any suspected biological family DNA reference samples received from citizens of the United States or foreign nationals and uploaded into the Combined DNA Index System (commonly referred to as “CODIS”) by an accredited, publicly funded CODIS forensic laboratory awarded a grant under this section may be used only for identifying missing persons and unidentified remains.
Limitation on use
Any biological family DNA reference samples from citizens of the United States or foreign nationals entered into CODIS for purposes of identifying missing persons and unidentified remains may not be disclosed to a Federal or State law enforcement agency for law enforcement purposes.
Pub. L. 106–177, title II, § 203114 Stat. 36Pub. L. 116–277, § 2(a)(2)134 Stat. 3369(, , ; , , .)
Editorial Notes
Codification
section 14662 of Title 42Section was formerly classified to , The Public Health and Welfare, prior to editorial reclassification and renumbering as this section.
Amendments
Pub. L. 116–277, § 2(a)(2)(A)section 40501 of this title2020—Subsec. (a). , substituted “an entity described in ” for “a State”.
Pub. L. 116–277, § 2(a)(2)(B)(i)Subsec. (b). , substituted “applicant” for “State” in introductory provisions.
Pub. L. 116–277, § 2(a)(2)(B)(ii)Subsec. (b)(1). , added par. (1) and struck out former par. (1) which read as follows: “report to the National Crime Information Center and when possible, to law enforcement authorities throughout the State regarding every deceased unidentified person, regardless of age, found in the State’s jurisdiction;”.
Pub. L. 116–277, § 2(a)(2)(B)(iii)Subsec. (b)(5). –(v), added par. (5).
Pub. L. 116–277, § 2(a)(2)(C)Subsec. (c). , added subsec. (c).