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Andrew Brons MEP

75% of Black Males Under 35 on Police DNA Database

November 24, 2009 - By BNP News

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A shocking 75 percent of all black males between the ages of 18 and 35 are now on the police’s DNA database, according to a report published by the Human Genetics Commission.

According to the Home Office, the national DNA database is a “key police intelligence tool” which helps to “quickly identify offenders, make earlier arrests, secure more convictions and provide critical investigative leads for police investigations.”

The disproportionate number of young black males on the database is of serious concern to law enforcement figures and sociologists alike, although the leftist bleating of “racism” being to blame, can be dismissed out of hand.

The National Policing Improvement Agency (NPIA), which controls the DNA database, makes it very clear that DNA is only taken when people are arrested for a recordable offence and not when they are “stopped and searched.”

The controlled media has claimed that the disproportionate racial statistics are the result of more black people being “stopped and searched” — but the NPIA guidelines make it clear that merely being stopped and searched does not lead to inclusion on the database.

According to the NPIA, the UK’s database “is the largest of any country: 5.2% of the UK population is on the database compared with 0.5% in the USA.”

The NPIA also claims that between April and September 2009, the National DNA Database (NDNAD) produced 112 matches to murders, 286 to rapes and 17,984 to other crime scenes.

“The National DNA Database continues to provide police with the most effective tool for the prevention and detection of crime since the development of fingerprint analysis over 100 years ago,” the NPIA says.

“Since 1998, more than 300,000 crimes have been detected with the aid of the Database, reassuring the public that offenders are more likely to be brought to justice.”

Some recent analysis carried out by ACRO (the ACPO Criminal Records Office), found that in 2008/09 the NDNAD linked 818 individuals to DNA found at murder/ manslaughter or rape crime scenes. 82 of these individuals had their DNA retained on the NDNAD despite not having a conviction.

The senior detectives in each case were asked whether the DNA match was important in the case. In 43 of the 82 cases the match was described as important. This averages once every 8.5 days.

* Meanwhile, it has been reported that Scotland Yard has officially stopped using the term “gang rape” out of fear of being accused of “racism.”

A new Scotland Yard paper on the phenomenon — of whom the perpetrators were earlier revealed to be 92 percent ethnic – now uses the term “multi-perpetrator rape” when describing sex attacks involving two or more culprits.

According to reports, the police said the wording had been carefully chosen because many of the offences involved two or more people but were not carried out by criminal gangs.

The more likely explanation is that “community activists” had said the phrase “gang rape” had “racist connotations.”





Nick Griffin MEP

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