Fort Worth

$2M in grants awarded to Fort Worth organizations to help reduce rape kit backlog

Three local organizations will receive funding to help eliminate the backlog of untested DNA and rape kits

An online tracking system allows investigators and survivors to keep tabs on the rape kits used as evidence in sexual assault cases.

Three local organizations were awarded a total of $2,095,653 in grants to help reduce the DNA and rape kit backlog.

The City of Fort Worth, the University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth, and Tarrant County were awarded the grants as part of the DNA Capacity Enhancement for Backlog Reduction (CEBR) Program.

The funding comes from the U.S. Department of Justice’s CEBR program and was authorized by the Debbie Smith Act, which U.S. Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) helped introduce.

“As long as rape kits sit untested, authorities are failing the victims and communities we’ve sworn to protect,” said Sen. Cornyn. 

Exit mobile version