North Carolina politicians promised Tuesday to spend the $6 million needed to catch up on testing decades of ignored evidence collected from sexual assault victims, and also prevent the injustice from repeating by requiring investigators to test evidence quickly.
Attorney General Josh Stein and a bipartisan group of lawmakers unveiled a legislative proposal that would catch up on testing sexual assault kits stored and sometimes forgotten in local law enforcement custody. Investigators would be required to submit new samples for DNA testing within six weeks.
The promise of new legislation came a day before the General Assembly’s two-year session opened Wednesday and a day after recent DNA testing led to a South Carolina man’s arrest in a 31-year-old Fayetteville rape.
A Republican leader on criminal justice issues said he’s confident lawmakers will take action soon.
“Funding will be provided. This is not a political football,” Rep. Jamie Boies of Southern Pines said, adding the issue has support in the state House and Senate and from Gov. Roy Cooper’s administration.
The proposal marks the state’s latest move after concluding a year ago that there were more than 15,000 untested sexual assault kits lingering in police storage lockers around the state.
“Each one of these kits represents a personal tragedy, and each one of those victims deserves justice,” Stein said.
Fayetteville Police Lt. John Somerindyke, the department’s lead cold case investigator, said rapists who aren’t caught have a high probability of committing the crime again, so finding and arresting them is crucial to public safety. About 20 women are raped each week in North Carolina, Stein said.
The General Assembly, at Stein’s urging, last year mandated a system of tracking sexual assault evidence kits with bar codes to prevent them from getting lost. A newly created committee prioritized the order in which to test the neglected kits.
Stein used half of a $2 million federal grant announced last fall to test several hundred samples. He announced Tuesday that another $2 million from the Governor’s Crime Commission would pay for private labs to test another 3,000 kits. That leaves the $6 million in taxpayer funding requested from legislators to catch up with the rest.
On Monday, Fayetteville police said Anthony Keith Grant, 52, of North Charleston, South Carolina was arrested and charged with raping a convenience store employee and robbing the business in 1987. The department has solved 37 rape cold cases, Somerindyke said.
Last fall, Charlotte-Mecklenburg police said they’d arrested men in two cases, each about a quarter-century old, after DNA collected in rape kits were tested and matched against genetic databases.
Related Stories
‹

Appeals Panel Blocks Law’s Use in NC Campaign Ad ProsecutionWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON A federal appeals court on Tuesday blocked a local North Carolina district attorney from prosecuting state Attorney General Josh Stein or anyone else for his 2020 campaign ad through a criminal libel law. The majority of a three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia, […]

Judge Won’t Keep Blocking Use of NC Law in Probe of AG’s AdWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON A federal judge opened the door Tuesday for a district attorney to try to prosecute someone for a 2020 campaign ad by North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein using a specific criminal count that the Democrat contends is unconstitutional on free-speech grounds. U.S. District Judge Catherine Eagles refused to issue […]

Judge Blocks Campaign Law Enforcement in AG Campaign ProbeWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON A federal judge agreed on Monday to block for now any enforcement of a state law in a political ad investigation of North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein’s campaign, saying it’s likely to win on legal claims that the law is unconstitutional. Following a court hearing in Greensboro, U.S. District […]

Gov. Cooper Eases More Pandemic Restrictions, Increases Business CapacityAt his press conference on Tuesday, Governor Roy Cooper announced that he will be signing a new executive order, effectively easing more pandemic restrictions. The order, which will go into effect on Friday, March 26 will allow some businesses to increase capacity up to 100 percent indoors and outdoors with safety protocols in place. This includes […]

Bar Owners To Postpone ABC Fees Under New Law Ok'd by CooperNorth Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper signed a bill on Thursday allowing bar owners whose businesses were limited or shut down by COVID-19 restrictions to defer permitting fees to the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission until they are allowed to fully resume operations. The new law that was introduced by House Republicans and unanimously approved by […]

Bill to Reopen NC Gyms, Bars Sent to Skeptical Governor After Passing HouseThe North Carolina legislature passed another bill on Wednesday overturning parts of Gov. Roy Cooper’s executive order that keep certain businesses closed to discourage the spread of COVID-19. As with previous legislation sent to him seeking to reopen bars, Cooper is also likely to veto the latest measure, which also ends the shuttering of gyms […]

Cooper Vetoes Bill to Let NC Bars Serve Patrons AgainGov. Roy Cooper on Friday vetoed legislation that would have let North Carolina standalone bars serve patrons again in contradiction to his executive order that’s aimed at halting the spread of COVID-19. The vetoed bill would have allowed bars to only reopen outdoors, as well as give additional outdoor seating to restaurants that the Democratic […]
![]()
North Carolina No Longer an Outlier on Sex and ConsentNorth Carolina’s governor has signed a sexual assault bill that says women can revoke consent during sex. Gov. Roy Cooper said in a news release Thursday that he had signed the bill, which undoes a 1979 court decision that made North Carolina the only state where women can’t revoke consent. The law also undoes a […]
![]()
NC Legislators Pass Bill to Close Sexual Assault LoopholesNorth Carolina legislators are putting new legal power behind the notion that “no means no” — even if a woman first said yes. A 40-year-old North Carolina court ruling that says women can’t revoke consent once a sex act has begun could be a thing of the past after the state House and Senate on […]
![]()
N Carolina Measure Would Require Testing for All Rape KitsNorth Carolina politicians promised Tuesday to spend the $6 million needed to catch up on testing decades of ignored evidence collected from sexual assault victims, and also prevent the injustice from repeating by requiring investigators to test evidence quickly. Attorney General Josh Stein and a bipartisan group of lawmakers unveiled a legislative proposal that would […]
›