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Yes. Provisions of California Penal Code 296 require certain people to provide a DNA sample. Those people include anyone convicted of a new felony offense, arrested on a felony charge, or previously convicted of a "qualifying" felony upon reporting to probation, parole or law enforcement. The DNA is uploaded to a DNA database where it can be accessed by law enforcement and comparted to DNA samples from crime scenes, etc.

2006-11-05 14:44:24 · answer #1 · answered by James P 4 · 1 0

I don't know about California but in NY a felony conviction of a person reporting to a probation officer must provide a urine test on each report to the officer, which is a test for drugs

2006-11-05 14:32:01 · answer #2 · answered by majean52 3 · 0 1

This actually became a law in the state of Indiana in July 2005. How the DNA is collected though varies from county to county. I don't believe that it is collected by a probation officer however it may be written into the probation conditions so that it is enforceable by the probation officer.

2006-11-05 14:47:12 · answer #3 · answered by siamsa_siamsa 5 · 0 1

maximum possibly the respond isn't any for felonies. For misdemeanors (@Cody, this is why we've spell verify!) they'd make some exceptions based on the variety of years that have handed, the character of the misdemeanor, and the checklist of the guy on account that he or she replaced into convicted of the crime. bear in mind that for any regulation enforcement application, one desires to demonstrate no longer basically convictions, yet arrests or perhaps contacts with the police. replaced into this the 1st actual time your husband had police touch? Odds are that if he's thoroughly truthful with you, he will admit that he had engaged in some (or many) crimes for which he replaced into no longer arrested. i'm no longer saying that he's a bad guy or that folk can't substitute. it somewhat is only that maximum PDs won't take a wager on the percentages. the main undemanding question seems "If i've got completed ______ interior the previous, am i able to be employed as a cop?" the respond for each guy or woman is the comparable. Be truthful. clarify what you probably did and don't depart out info. via hiding what you probably did, you are going to quickly disqualify your self. via admitting it, you will open the doors to attention for the job based on your skills.

2016-10-21 08:16:40 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Normaly a convicted felon will already have his DNA on file as part of his conviction of that felony.

And also since they have to provide a urine test, he would or could get the dNA anyway.

He could object and hire an attorney to file a motion with the judge, but in the end, Iwould say the judge requries it.

2006-11-05 14:49:41 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

That sounds like a great law!

2006-11-05 15:25:38 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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