The County of Orange Internal Audit Department should review the District Attorney's DNA unit to determine the actual costs associated with this specialized unit, including the collection and processing of the DNA samples, and the operation and maintenance of the database, including updating of the software. The OCDA believes this recommendation has been asserted without basis or justification and is therefore not warranted or reasonable. The OCDA is not opposed to a review of the DNA unit "to determine the actual costs associated with this specialized unit, including the collection and processing of the DNA samples, and the operation and maintenance of the database, including updating of the software" if such action will serve a legitimate purpose. Since no rationale has been provided for this recommendation, the OCDA can only assume that the basis for this recommendation is to conduct a cost-benefit assessment of the local DNA database system. Although a review of the DNA unit with particular focus on the local DNA database system can determine the costs associated with the operation of the local DNA database, such an audit cannot easily or accurately reflect the resources the local DNA database saves the County. Any attempt to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of the local DNA database is difficult at best. Of course, deliverables such as kits, analyses and salaries can be calculated over a given time period. The bulk of expenses, up until this point, primarily include startup costs for local DNA database set-up rather than day-to-day operational costs. Considering start-up, maintenance and DNA sample collection costs alone does not, however, paint a complete picture of the local DNA database. Not only does the local DNA database allow the OCDA to effectively solve crime, it also allows the district attorney, public defender, courts, jail system and police agencies to save valuable time and resources. It is difficult to assign a dollar figure to the benefits and savings gained by creating and maintaining a local law enforcement DNA database. How does one assign a monetary value to finding the perpetrator of a murder or exonerating an individual who was wrongly convicted of a crime? Is it possible to determine how much investigative, prosecutorial, defense bar and court resources are saved when a criminal is identified quickly through a local DNA database hit? Is there really a way of assigning a monetary value to incarcerating a violent offender before he hurts or kills another innocent person? Can the number potential crime victims who were not harmed be determined because a criminal was deterred from committing additional offenses knowing that his DNA profile was in the local DNA database? Will law enforcement agencies such as police departments, crime labs and prosecution offices ever "break even" or "operate in the black" in their effort to protect the public? The DNA Unit gathered and provided information regarding local DNA database operating costs to the Grand Jury in November 2009. In 2006, the DNA Unit purchased the necessary database software and license from Forensic Science Services (FSS) for $500,000. This fee was a one-time start-up cost that granted a perpetual software license to the OCDA. For the first several years, the DNA Unit paid FSS $100,000 annually for maintenance and support. Beginning in 2009, in the OCDA opted to pay for single-incident repairs rather than pay the all-inclusive maintenance fee. Originally, the OCDA obtained the DNA collection kits from FSS for $7 per kit. The FSS processed the first 550 kits for $40 and all subsequent samples for $52 each. To increase efficiency and save money, the OCDA engaged the services of Bode Technology on January 14, 2009. Bode provides DNA collection kits at a cost $4.95 per kit and DNA STR analysis for $24 per sample with a 30 day turn-around-time. OCDA collects a $75 fee from each individual who provides a DNA sample for inclusion in the local DNA database to help offset the costs associated with collecting and processing the DNA samples. The OCDA DNA Unit researched studies and articles regarding similar local law enforcement DNA databases to better understand the cost-benefit factors relating to maintaining a local DNA database. Not unexpectedly, extensive literature does not appear to exist on this topic highlighting the fact that Orange County is a forerunner in effectively utilizing DNA technology to solve crime. The OCDA patterned the local DNA database after the United Kingdom's DNA database. The UK DNA database has proven to be an effective crime- solving tool. The probability that a new crime scene profile loaded onto the UK DNA database will match an individual's profile is 52%. In the UK, when crime scene investigators collect DNA samples at a crime scene, the detection rate dramatically increases. For example, for domestic burglary, the detection rate increases from 16 to 41% and, for vehicle theft, from 8 to 63%.1" To understand how an in-depth cost-benefit analysis might possibly be conducted of the local DNA database, the OCDA studied the methodology of NPC Research, an Oregon-based company that specializes in courtroom cost analysis. NPC Research primarily conducts single issue court studies such cost effectiveness of maintaining DUI or Drug Courts. The company outlines its standard methodology in the various studies it conducts for courts across the country. Following NPC's methodology, the OCDA explored the feasibility of creating a study to specifically determine the cost saving associated with a single DNA collection sample. In order to find out how much time and resources are saved by collecting DNA samples, the County would need to identify the average time the District Attorney's Office dedicated to cases before and after the local DNA database was created. Additionally, similar data would be required for the Public Defender's Office, police agencies and the court system. Levitt, Mairi. 2007. Forensic databases: benefits and ethical and social costs. British Medical Bulletin 83: 235-248. Unfortunately, Orange County does not publish data regarding the average length of courtroom proceedings nor does it have data specific to how much time judges, attorneys, paralegals, investigators and clerks spend on case investigation, preparation and court appearances, especially for the lesser offenses that result in DNA samples for the local DNA database. While this information would possible to collect, such a process will be extremely time-intensive and would most likely require months to years of meticulous data collection. Even after gathering such data, the County would need to analyze average salaries for all parties involved and break down those annual salaries into smaller time units that correspond to the average case investigation, preparation and court appearance times. The County will only be able to determine how much time and resources the local DNA database saves if the cost savings due to truncated case investigation, preparation and court appearances is calculated. Due to the overwhelming difficulty of collecting time related data, the OCDA DNA Unit worked with the OCDA Research Unit to provide a few "snapshots" or examples that demonstrate that cases have been resolved more efficiently after the implementation of the local DNA database (See Appendix A). Due to the amount of information available and time restraints, District Attorney's Research Unit examined only defendants filed in the Central Justice Court between January 1, 2005 and December 31, 2009. Four areas of efficiency were scrutinized: 1. Number of hearings pre-disposition 2. Number of hearings post-disposition 3. Number of "formal" diversions 4. Number of felony bindovers . . TABLE 1: Misdemeanor Defendants Completed in Central Justice Center by Year Completed Defendants Completed 2006 2007 2005 2008 2009 Total Plea/Trial 4252 5510 8494 8337 8409 35002 Dismissed 573 556 698 621 754 3202 Diversion 551 663 551 499 363 2627 DNA Programs 275 559 1124 1958 TABLE 2: Felony Defendants Completed in Central Justice Center by Year Completed 2005 2006 2007 Defendants Completed 2008 2009 Total Plea/Trial 2336 2007 2398 2208 1808 10757 Dismissed 360 336 324 383 310 1713 Diversion 1369 1167 1030 787 530 4883 DNA Programs 193 1 194 TABLE 3: Number of Misdemeanor Hearings in Central Justice System by Year Completed 2005 2007 2008 Events 2006 2009 Total Pre Disposition 25796 31766 34516 28221 30607 150906 Post Disposition 15272 22160 26642 25504 97633 8055 TABLE 4: Number of Felony Hearings in Central Justice System by Year Completed Events 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Pre Disposition 21276 17844 22243 20553 15889 97805 14978 63816 Post Disposition 10109 12901 13657 12171 Although it cannot be known if the local DNA database system implementation was the sole reason for the decrease in the number of hearings pre-disposition between 2005 and 2009 in the Central Justice Center, both misdemeanor and felony local DNA database participating defendants had almost a third fewer hearings pre-disposition than non-local DNA database defendants. Misdemeanor local DNA database participating defendants also had a third fewer post-disposition events than non-local DNA database defendants. Fewer hearings translates to significant time and resource savings for the district attorney, public defender, probation, police, judges, and other court staff. Prior to the implementation of the OCDA local DNA database, many defendants were sentenced to diversion programs. Diversion cases require the most follow-up from the criminal justice system than any other type of case. Proposition 36 and Drug Court defendants are scheduled for multiple follow-up and progress reviews. These diversion defendants log multiple probation violations during the lifetime of their cases. Since the implementation of the OCDA local DNA database, the number of misdemeanor diversions decreased in the Central Justice Center by 60% and the number of felony diversions decreased by 45% during the same time frame. Empirical data gleaned from preliminary hearing statistics highlight another example of the cost benefits of maintaining a local DNA database. When an individual is charged with a felony in Orange County, one of the initial steps of the usual criminal justice process requires the prosecution to prove, to a magistrate during a preliminary hearing, that a crime has been committed and that there is reasonable cause to believe that the defendant is the person who committed the felony offense. As a t result of local DNA database collection efforts and the close evaluation of felony cases by the OCDA "Strike Team," the number of preliminary hearings conducted last year was reduced by 1,000. In Central Justice Center alone, the number of defendants bound over for trial decreased from 748 in 2005 to 335 in 2009, a decrease of 55%. The management of the Orange County Crime Lab should revert to its prior status