Activist Post
November 12, 2012
As the US Supreme Court meets privately over the next few days, it seems that all of the pieces of the puzzle are coming together in order to form what will undeniably be the most scientifically advanced dictatorship ever realized in world history.
 Supreme Court Justices are currently 
meeting in private for the purpose of deciding whether or not to hear a 
highly important genetic privacy case regarding the possibility that 
government authority extends to taking DNA samples from anyone arrested 
for “serious” crimes. If the court rules in favor of the prosecutors who
 wish for greater access to DNA samples, convictions will not be 
necessary to require DNA from arrestees.
Supreme Court Justices are currently 
meeting in private for the purpose of deciding whether or not to hear a 
highly important genetic privacy case regarding the possibility that 
government authority extends to taking DNA samples from anyone arrested 
for “serious” crimes. If the court rules in favor of the prosecutors who
 wish for greater access to DNA samples, convictions will not be 
necessary to require DNA from arrestees.As David Kravetz writes for Wired, at least 21 states and the federal government have policies and laws requiring suspects to give DNA samples upon their arrest. In these states, DNA saliva samples are added into state and federal “crime-fighting databases,” effectively creating a catalog of individuals and their most personal information, even those not guilty of committing a crime.
Kravetz writes, “The issue 
confronts the government’s interest in solving crime, balanced against 
the constitutional rights of those arrested to be free from government 
intrusion.”
The case now before the Supreme Court Justices 
revolves around a decision made by Maryland’s top court, which decided 
that taking DNA samples from suspects who were not convicted was a 
breach of the Fourth Amendment – the right against unreasonable searches
 and seizures. 
The Maryland Court of Appeals stated that the 
individuals arrested have a “weighty and reasonable expectation of 
privacy against warrantless, suspicionless searches” and that this 
expectation is not superseded by the state’s “purported interest in 
assuring proper identification.” 
In response to the argument made by Maryland 
prosecutors that DNA mouth swabs were no more intrusive than 
fingerprinting, the court responded by stating that it “could not turn a
 blind eye” to the “vast genetic treasure map” in the DNA databases 
maintained by the State.
Furthermore, the court noted that, while 
fingerprinting can only provide information concerning the identity of a
 suspect, DNA holds keys to a person’s family history
 and relations, health risks, and many other aspects of an individual’s 
most personal details. In the move toward a society which attempts to predict criminal or dissenting behavior, it is also frightening to note that many “experts” and would-be scientific tyrants claim
 that DNA can actually envisage such behavior. Regardless of the falsity
 of this “pre-crime” theory, the fact is that more and more credence to 
such pseudo-science is being given by the corporate media, law 
enforcement, government, corporations, and the scientific community 
itself.
It
 should also be noted that the case currently being reviewed by the 
Supreme Court does not involve the practice of taking DNA samples from 
convicts, a policy that is not being challenged.
According to Kravetz of Wired, the Supreme Court 
has held previously held that when police conduct an intrusion of the 
body during the course of an investigation, “exigent circumstances” or a
 warrant is needed. However, one should keep in mind that the taking of 
blood from a suspected drunk driver is now considered an “exigent 
circumstance” because alcohol evaporates in the body. 
Unfortunately, the Supreme Court meeting 
currently taking place does not look promising. After all, Chief Justice
 John Roberts has already stayed the Maryland court decision and has 
actually indicated that there was a “fair prospect” that the Supreme 
Court would reverse the decision. 
Although one hopes that the Court will either 
rule in favor of the Maryland Court’s decision or that it will decide 
not to review the case and allow the ruling to become law, it is an 
unfortunate reality that US courts have been not only derelict in their 
responsibility to protect the rights of the American people but that 
they have been outright hostile to it, particularly in recent years. 
Any court that rules it Constitutional to force individuals to buy private products or to strip search non-violent arrestees
 with impunity and no probable cause is one that holds very little hope 
for the survival of privacy, Constitutional, or human rights. 
While we await the decision of the Supreme Court,
 we can always remain hopeful. However, considering the court’s recent 
history, it would be unwise to allow those hopes to rise too high. 
Read other articles by Brandon Turbeville here.
Brandon Turbeville is an author out of Florence, South Carolina. He has a Bachelor's Degree from Francis Marion University and is the author of three books, Codex Alimentarius -- The End of Health Freedom, 7 Real Conspiracies, and Five Sense Solutions and Dispatches From a Dissident. Turbeville has published over 175 articles dealing on a wide variety of subjects including health, economics, government corruption, and civil liberties. Brandon Turbeville's podcast Truth on The Tracks can be found every Monday night 9 pm EST at UCYTV. He is available for radio and TV interviews. Please contact activistpost (at) gmail.com.
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