The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) is the research, development, and evaluation agency of the U. S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and a component of the Office of Justice Programs (OJP).
NIJ provides objective, independent, evidence-based knowledge and tools to enhance the administration of
credit:
justice and public safety.
With this solicitation, NIJ seeks proposals from States wishing to receive funding to help defray the costs associated with postconviction DNA testing in cases that involve violent felony offenses (as defined by State law) in which actual innocence might be demonstrated.
Funds may be used to review such postconviction cases and to locate and analyze biological evidence associated with these cases.
Postconviction DNA testing has received considerable attention in recent years.
Since the advent of forensic DNA analysis, a number of people convicted of crimes have been subsequently exonerated through DNA analysis of crime scene evidence that was not tested at the time of trial.
Additionally, newer technologies have substantially increased the successful DNA analysis of aged, degraded, limited, or otherwise compromised biological evidence.
As a result, crime scene samples once thought to be unsuitable for testing in the past may now yield DNA profiles.
Moreover, samples that previously generated inconclusive DNA results may now be amenable to reanalysis using newer methods.