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  1. Jan 1, 2022 · In 2000, the NDDB only accepted DNA profiles for two indices in support of criminal investigations. Today the NDDB can accept DNA profiles for seven indices in support of criminal and humanitarian investigations. In 2000, approximately 50 offences qualified as designated offences for which the court could issue a DNA order.

  2. As of March 31, 202 3, the NDDB contained 6 50,260 DNA profiles in the Criminal Indices, and 2,155 DNA profiles in the Humanitarian Indices . Due to the global pandemic, the volume of submissions

  3. A DNA profile developed from a human remain and entered into the Human Remains Index or a DNA profile developed from a personal effect of a missing person and entered into the Missing Persons Index matches to a crime scene DNA profile in the Crime Scene Index. Offender duplicate Cases where two biological samples from the same person were ...

  4. A DNA profile developed from a human remain and entered into the Human Remains Index or a DNA profile developed from a personal effect of a missing person and entered into the Missing Persons Index matches to a crime scene DNA profile in the Crime Scene Index. Offender duplicate Cases where two biological samples from the same person were ...

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  5. The NDDB has been working diligently in partnership with the National Centre for Missing Persons and Unidentified Remains to assess, accept and process submissions for the new humanitarian indices (Missing Persons Index, Relatives of Missing Persons Index and Human Remains Index) introduced in 2018.

  6. The National DNA Data Bank is responsible for two principal indices: 1. The Convicted Offenders Index (COI) is an electronic index that has been developed from DNA profiles collected and processed by the NDDB from offenders convicted of primary and secondary designated offences identified in section 487.04 of the Canadian Criminal Code; and, 2.

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  8. When the NDDB first began operating in 2000, its two indices contained relatively few DNA profiles, and it took more than three years to reach the milestone of 1,000 offender hits. Now, the NDDB takes an average of just three months to achieve each additional 1,000 offender hits.

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