Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 121— - VIOLENT CRIME CONTROL AND LAW ENFORCEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VIII— - STATE AND LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT › Part Part A— - DNA Identification › § 12591
The FBI Director must set up an advisory board on DNA quality within 180 days after September 13, 1994. The board must include scientists from state, local, and private crime labs, molecular and population geneticists who do not work for a forensic lab, and a representative from the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The board will write and sometimes update recommended quality assurance rules and proficiency testing standards for DNA work. After looking at the board’s recommendations, the FBI Director will issue and update official quality assurance and proficiency standards that cover the different kinds of DNA tests and include a way to grade laboratory performance. Until the board makes recommendations and the Director acts, the existing technical working group guidelines will be treated as the Director’s standards. The FBI must also issue rules for using Rapid DNA instruments; a Rapid DNA instrument is equipment that does a fully automated process to produce a DNA analysis from a DNA sample. For administrative matters, the board is an advisory board to the FBI Director, it will be run separately from other FBI boards, and one usual federal advisory-board rule does not apply. The board ends 5 years after the first appointments unless the FBI Director extends it. Within 1 year after the law takes effect, the National Institute of Justice must tell the House and Senate Judiciary Committees whether it has arranged (by contract, grant, or other action) a blind external proficiency testing program for DNA that will be in place within 2 years after September 13, 1994, or whether such testing is already available, or whether it is not feasible. A blind external proficiency test is given through a second agency and looks like routine evidence to the lab. The Attorney General must make up to $250,000 available from certain crime-control funds in the first fiscal year funds are distributed under this subtitle to help carry out this part.
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Citation
34 U.S.C. § 12591
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73