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ND HB 1044 clarifies who may collect DNA samples (medical staff for blood/body fluids, officers for saliva), allows limited out-of-state collection with lab approval, and grants im
ND HB 1044 clarifies who may collect DNA samples (medical staff for blood/body fluids, officers for saliva), allows limited out-of-state collection with lab approval, and grants im
Status & timeline
- Bill: House Bill No. 1044 — amends and reenacts section 31‑13‑04 of the North Dakota Century Code.
- Introduced: November 12, 2024.
- Committee action: Judiciary Committee adopted proposed amendments (committee report dated Jan. 14, 2025).
- Enrollment/filing: Engrossed/enrolled and filed with the Secretary of State March 18, 2025.
- Emergency: The bill contains an emergency clause — intended to take effect immediately upon approval.
Purpose and intent
- To clarify and update who may collect biological specimens for DNA testing, how specimens must be handled, permit limited out‑of‑state collection with lab approval, and provide civil and criminal immunity for authorized collectors who follow laboratory‑approved procedures.
Key provisions / statutory changes (amends NDCC § 31‑13‑04)
1. Authorized collectors for blood and other body fluids
- Samples of blood or other body fluids for DNA testing may be obtained in a medically approved manner by any of the following: physician, registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, phlebotomist, or medical technologist.
- Such samples must be packaged and submitted in kits approved or provided by the testing laboratory and in accordance with rules adopted by the laboratory.
Authorized collectors for saliva
Out‑of‑state collection
Immunity
Who is affected
- Law enforcement agencies and correctional facilities (peace officers, certified correctional officers).
- Health care professionals and laboratory personnel (physicians, nurses, phlebotomists, medical technologists, and labs that approve kits and adopt sampling rules).
- Individuals from whom DNA specimens are collected.
- Out‑of‑state agencies that seek to collect samples for submission to North Dakota labs (subject to lab approval).
Procedural/administrative impacts
- Laboratories must approve or provide collection kits and adopt rules governing sampling and submission techniques.
- Authorized collectors should follow laboratory‑approved procedures to secure the immunity protection.
- The emergency clause makes the statute effective immediately on approval, so training/implementation by labs and agencies may need to proceed promptly.
Practical effect
- The amendments formalize permitted collectors for various specimen types, permit limited interstate sampling with lab approval, and reduce legal risk for authorized collectors who comply with lab‑approved methods — intended to streamline DNA evidence collection and clarify responsibilities.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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