Switzerland
The 2008 Interpol survey reports that 19,245 crime scene DNA profiles and 99,217 individuals' profiles, plus 95 missing persons' DNA profiles and 101 unknown/deceased DNA profiles were held in Switzerland at the time of the survey.
DNA-Profil-Gesetz[1]
DNA-Profil-Verodnung[2]
DNA-Analyselabor-Verodnung[3]
Recording of DNA profiles from:
• Persons who are suspected as perpetrators or participants of a crime or offense
• persons convicted
• Dead People
• Traces
• unidentified persons living or dead
• biological materials, the missing
Persons can be assigned
• relatives of dead or missing persons who are identified outside of the criminal justice process
Not included are
The DNA profiles of:
• victims identified
• crime scene people whose traces of offenders must be distinguished
• Persons who have been excluded in a mass examination as perpetrators
• suspected persons, has shown to have been that they can be excluded as the perpetrator of the crime or offense in question
• Persons who were involved in a process that has been set
Offenses:
• crime or offense
- ↑ DNA-Profil-Gesetz [DNA Profile Law], SR 363 (Swis).
- ↑ DNA-Profil-Verodnung, [DNA Profile Regulations] December 4, 2004 SR 363.1 (Swis.)
- ↑ DNA-Analyselabor-Verodnung [DNA Laboratory Analysis Regulation], June 25, 2005, SR 363.11(Swis.)