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Connecticut Eliminates Statute of Limitations on DNA Rape Cases

"Newer technologies allow us to dig deeper and do more with those samples, and now our laws are in line with that technology."

Photo: Governor M. Jodi Rell 

Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell today highlighted a new law that eliminates the statute of limitations on sexual assaults that can be prosecuted with the use of DNA evidence, calling the change a "major step forward for crime victims in our state."

Under the change, six of the most serious sexual assault crimes -- first-degree sexual assault, aggravated first-degree sexual assault, sexual assault in a spousal or cohabiting relationship, second-degree sexual assault and third-degree sexual assault, with or without a firearm -- may be prosecuted at any time, if the alleged perpetrator is identified through DNA evidence and the crime was reported within five years of the attack.
 
"Make no mistake: Sexual assault is violent crime -- it is not a crime of passion," Rell said at a ceremonial bill signing at the Waterbury Police Department headquarters. "It is violence of the most personal and devastating kind, as brutal in its own right as murder. And it deserves not only harsh punishment but our very best -- and unswerving -- effort to bring the perpetrators to justice. Today Connecticut takes another step in that direction.
 
"Although DNA matching has been around for some time, there were times in the past when the samples were too small or too degraded to be used in prosecutions," the Governor noted. "Newer technologies allow us to dig deeper and do more with those samples, and now our laws are in line with that technology."
 
The change is contained within Senate Bill 1500, the "general government implementer" -- omnibus legislation enacted to put many provisions of the new state budget into operation.