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Sign upFile photo: A forensic analyst works on evidence in a sexual assault case in the biology lab at the Houston Forensic Science Center. Delaware has implemented a new policy that sets time limits for when rape exam kits must be tested. (Pat Sullivan/AP Photo, file)
Jeffrey King escaped justice for more than a quarter century after he attacked and sexually assaulted a stranger walking alone late at night on a Delaware street in 1993.
One key reason police couldn’t solve the crime is that the evidence obtained from the 22-year-old female victim when a nurse examined her at the hospital never got tested for DNA. Her evidence kit had languished, along with more than 1,200 others in Delaware, for years and years.
But after Delaware received $2.2 million in federal money to clear the backlog, the DNA obtained in the woman’s attack linked King to the 1993 attack. Newark police arrested King and in May he pleaded guilty to third-degree unlawful sexual intercourse and unlawful sexual penetration. King, 57, of Coatesville, Pa., is awaiting sentencing.
King is one of nine men arrested by police in Delaware for sex crimes agianst 23 women since Delaware started reducing its backlog in 2015. Another man arrested was Kili Mayfield, of Wilmington, who was convicted of raping and beating three women over a seven-year period and was sentenced to life in prison.
Delaware prosecutors say more arrests are pending here from ongoing investigations stemming from evidence obtained from the old tests.
The state completed testing of the 1,235 old kits in September 2020. Cognizant that cases which languish for years or decades amount to justice denied for rape victims, officials recently established policies to assure prompt testing of rape evidence kits to aid police investigations. The policies establish timelines for the collection, documentation, processing and investigation of the kits.
The state Attorney General’s Office adopted the new rules in collaboration with healthcare facilities and the Delaware Criminal Justice Council, an independent state body that oversaw testing of the old kits.
“These changes will aid the investigation and prosecution of sexual assault, help prevent future backlogs, and speed the wheels of justice for survivors,” Attorney General Kathy Jennings said.
The policies:
John Evans, a former state police major who heads the Division of Forensic Science, said no kits “are being outsourced to private labs” and the current turnaround time for kit testing is 41 days.
Though 41 days is longer than the policy to test samples within 30 days, Evans pointed out that it’s “well within’’ the 90-day annual average time specified in the policy.
The money to clear the backlog came from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI), which has awarded more than $308 million nationwide to clear backlogs and provide other support to state and local governments.
Prosecutor Erik Towne, who handles rape cases, said he’s overseeing investigations aided by testing of old kits, and expects to see some result in arrests.
“They’re going to be extremely useful in our cases going forward, not only to ensure the kits are being tested, but the way it’s been set up, it also should get us results to use in our prosecutions in a much quicker fashion than was possible before.”
The guarantee of testing for victims who agree to be examined “certainly will hopefully provide more comfort for them,” Towne said.
“In my experience, these are victims that are going through the worst possible thing in their life,’’ he said. “Not only is the assault itself traumatic and stressful but I know in speaking with victims and handling these cases, going through the sexual assault exam isn’t an easy thing either.”
“So this policy at least requires and guarantees that when they go through that test, when they go through that examination, that those swabs, those pieces that were collected, are being analyzed in every case,” he said.
Venita Garvin, who heads the Delaware Alliance Against Sexual Violence, says eliminating the backlog and taking steps to ensure there won’t be another one is critical for survivors.
Survivors “learn to live with the trauma as best they can, even when the evidence they provide has sat on shelves for months, years or decades,’’ Garvin said. “That simply means that it’s taking that much longer for the survivor to have some level of justice for the crime that has been perpetrated against him or her.”
“The new policies will hopefully speed up the process for survivors as they are seeking legal remedies and justice. I think we are moving in the right direction.”
Mike Kelly, a former police officer who leads the SAKI program for the justice council, said the policy “is mirroring best practices” elsewhere across the country. Kelly said he’s confident that going forward, the estimated 140 kits that are collected each year will be expedited and prioritized.
“It tightens those timelines,’’ Kelly said of the new policy. “So that’s a great help for accountability, and making sure that we are getting those kits into the Division of Forensic Science and then the turnaround of getting them back to law enforcement and the continuance of the investigations.”
Kelly said the arrests, and prospects for more, are a godsend.
“In every one of those cases we were able to provide that closure to that victim,” Kelly said, “and have that case see the courtroom and justice served.’’
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