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|    alt.war.civil.usa    |    Discussing American civil war.. and 2.0    |    44,056 messages    |
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|    Message 43,463 of 44,056    |
|    DEI elected Tina Kotek to All    |
|    DNA from 2014 Seattle sexual assault mat    |
|    28 Jan 25 21:49:53    |
      XPost: talk.politics.guns, seattle.politics, talk.politics.misc       XPost: alt.abortion, sac.politics       From: incompetent.lesbian@ruining.oregon              https://images.seattletimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/01252       19_hailu_162655.jpg?d=768x956              A convicted rapist serving a prison sentence was booked into the King County       Jail on Friday to face another rape charge filed earlier this month after his       DNA was matched to a second victim through a previously untested rape kit,       jail and court records        show.              Kirose Hailu, now 27, is serving a 14-year prison term for raping an       intoxicated woman in an alley on Seattle’s Capitol Hill in February 2014. He       was charged earlier this month with second-degree rape, accused of raping a       second woman in downtown        Seattle eight months after the first rape, charging papers say.              Since 2015, police agencies across the state have been required to submit       evidence from every sexual-assault exam to the State Patrol Crime Lab for       forensic analysis after a law was passed taking discretion away from       individual officers and detectives to        decide which kits to send in for testing. At the same time, the state began a       concerted effort to catalog and test some 6,000 previously-untested kits that       had sat untouched in evidence rooms for years, with the hope of linking cases       and identifying        serial offenders.              Among the tests sent in was the one belonging to a now-34-year-old woman, who       was struggling with a heroin addiction when she was raped by a stranger on       Oct. 22, 2014, say the charges against Hailu.              Following the rape, she went to the hospital and underwent a sexual-assault       exam, where evidence taken from her body was packaged into what is commonly       referred to as a rape kit, according to charging papers.              The kits can contain a variety of evidence, including underwear and swabs of a       victim’s mouth, fingernails, genitals and any part of the skin where semen       or saliva may be present. Blood and urine are also collected and bruises and       other injuries are        photographed.              A detective entered the woman’s rape kit into evidence and tried to contact       her for a follow-up interview, but never heard back from her. Her case was       closed in November 2014.              Though Seattle police submitted the woman’s rape kit in March 2015 for       forensic testing, it doesn’t appear that it was analyzed at that time; court       documents don’t indicate why. Police again requested that her kit be tested       in June 2016 — but the        results didn’t come back until April, nearly two years later. The DNA was       matched to Hailu, the charges say.              In August, the case was assigned to another detective. By then, a victim       advocate had located the woman, who agreed to come in for an interview.              According to the charges, at the time of the rape the woman was struggling       with heroin addiction and after six months being sober, she went downtown       looking to score drugs from her usual dealer. A man approached her, claimed       he’d seen the dealer walk        down a nearby alley, and offered to walk with her, the charges say.              Once in the alley, the man pushed her down, threatened to kill her and raped       her, the charges say. Then he left.              Following the rape, the woman described hitting rock bottom and eventually       overdosing.              She entered a one-year treatment program in February 2015.              By then, Hailu and a second man, Wolid Mohammed, had been identified as       suspects in the February 2014 rape on Capitol Hill. They were charged with       second-degree rape after their DNA was matched to DNA recovered from the       then-21-year-old victim’s rape        kit, court records show.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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