POST-CONVICTION DNA TESTING S.B. 1014:
SUMMARY OF BILL
REPORTED FROM COMMITTEE
Senate Bill 1014 (as reported without amendment)
Sponsor: Senator Jeff Irwin
Committee: Civil Rights, Judiciary, and Public Safety
CONTENT
The bill would amend Chapter 10 (New Trials, Writs of Error and Bills of Exceptions) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure to do the following:
-- Modify the circumstances under which a convicted defendant may petition to the circuit
court to order DNA testing of biological material identified during the investigation leading
to the conviction, and for a new trial based on the results of that testing.
-- Modify the requirements for when a court would have to order DNA testing for a convicted
defendant.
-- Require, if the results of the DNA testing called into question the convicted defendant’s
identity, that the court hold a hearing to determine if the testing and any new evidence
could yield a different result upon retrial.
-- Modify how long an investigating agency would have to preserve any biological material.
MCL 770.16
BRIEF RATIONALE
The Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act allows an individual to bring an action for
compensation against the State for wrongful conviction and imprisonment in a State
correctional facility for a crime that individual did not commit. According to testimony, it is
not uncommon for a judge to determine that a defendant could have been wrongfully
convicted and should be allowed to petition a new trial based on updated DNA testing,
potentially allowing that individual to be compensated for the wrongful imprisonment.
Modifying how biological material could be used in new trials under the Code of Criminal
Procedure has been suggested to make it more likely that only guilty individuals are convicted
for crimes and that individuals who have been wrongly convicted are eligible for relief.
Legislative Analyst: Eleni Lionas
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would increase the likelihood of more DNA testing, post-conviction. This would have
varied and indeterminate fiscal impacts on the State and local governments depending on the
extent to which DNA test petitions would increase under the bill. Additionally, an increase in
petitions would likely result in a corresponding increase in circuit court hearings under the
bill; however, the cost to local courts would likely be minimal. The Cooley Law School
Innocence Project is the only post-conviction DNA-based innocence program in Michigan and
has screened over 6,000 cases since 2001, resulting in nearly 400 exonerations in that time,
mostly based on DNA evidence, an average of less than 20 exonerations per year.
DNA testing costs, which are covered by the State, vary depending on the sample tested and
the type of test involved. Some types of forensic testing cost less than $100, while other
sample testing can exceed $5,000 depending on the number and complexity of tests involved.
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New cost-effective testing procedures are constantly being developed. A median range the
State can expect to pay for DNA testing is likely to be between $1,000 and $2,000 per case.
Any new exonerations that came as a result of the bill would come with statewide savings
and costs. These savings and costs would likely balance each other out. Savings would
predominantly come from a reduction in the prison population, cited in recent years by
multiple publications as costing the State $48,000 per prisoner, per year, while costs would
likely come from payments under the Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act of 2016, at
$50,000 per prisoner, per year.
Date Completed: 11-26-24 Fiscal Analyst: Michael Siracuse
SAS\Floors2324\sb1014
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official
statement of legislative intent.
Page 2 of 2 Bill Analysis @ www.senate.michigan.gov/sfa sb1014/2324
Statutes affected: Senate Introduced Bill: 770.16