
Troubled DNA lab boss resigns after being suspended
Forensic Science Queensland director Linzi Wilson-Wilde received a show cause notice for her removal by the Liberal National government in June following another setback.
Attorney-General Deb Frecklington made the call after learning the beleaguered lab had paused routine DNA testing for seven days following the discovery of "contamination issues".
Ms Frecklington on Friday announced Dr Wilson-Wilde had resigned from her position effective immediately.
She said Forensic Biology Executive Manager Natasha Mitchell would continue acting in the director role until a permanent appointment was made.
"The Crisafulli government is firmly committed to the future of Forensic Science Queensland," Ms Frecklington said in a statement.
The LNP government did not disclose the nature of the contamination issues but routine DNA testing has since resumed.
Forensic Science Queensland was established in 2023 after two inquiries exposed major failings over a number of years at the lab.
They included a "fundamentally flawed" automated testing method that may have led to offenders potentially escaping conviction for nine years from 2007.
Dr Wilson-Wilde was appointed director in September 2024 after serving as interim chief executive.
She received the role from the former Labor government prior to it entering caretaker mode before the 2024 state election.
The LNP government chose Dr Kirsty Wright to oversee forensic lab reforms when it won the October 2024 election.
The LNP launched reforms after it emerged more than 40,000 of the state's most serious cases were "under a forensic cloud" following the back-to-back inquiries.
It moved amendments in parliament in April to ensure current DNA sample retention was extended from three to seven years to tackle the retesting backlog, which may take years.
It was a recommendation of Dr Wright, who will oversee a DNA Lab Review and hand down recommendations with renowned FBI expert Bruce Budowle.
Forensic scientist Dr Wright spoke out about the lab, triggering the two inquiries held in as many years.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
11 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
From antisemitism summit to no net zero: What LNP members want from government
The news LNP members have called for the Queensland government to a phase-out pokies, commission an inquiry probing a long-term public transport strategy beyond the 2032 Games and revoke policies nudging public servants toward union membership. These motions and 160 more are among the issues put up for debate by party members and have made the list of resolutions able to be hashed out in the open session of the party's annual convention from Friday. Others, directed at the Crisafulli government and a future federal Coalition government, include abandoning net zero, relaxing native vegetation-clearing laws, an antisemitism summit and action on 'gender ideology'. Why it matters Over three days, grassroots members from LNP branches across the state, along with party officials and elected representatives, will gather in Brisbane for the 2025 convention. While the positions taken by the convention are not binding on the parliamentary arm, this year's gathering will be the first in a decade under a state LNP government with power to act on them. the Crisafulli government, or federal Coalition leaders Sussan Ley and David Littleproud.

The Age
11 hours ago
- The Age
From antisemitism summit to no net zero: What LNP members want from government
The news LNP members have called for the Queensland government to a phase-out pokies, commission an inquiry probing a long-term public transport strategy beyond the 2032 Games and revoke policies nudging public servants toward union membership. These motions and 160 more are among the issues put up for debate by party members and have made the list of resolutions able to be hashed out in the open session of the party's annual convention from Friday. Others, directed at the Crisafulli government and a future federal Coalition government, include abandoning net zero, relaxing native vegetation-clearing laws, an antisemitism summit and action on 'gender ideology'. Why it matters Over three days, grassroots members from LNP branches across the state, along with party officials and elected representatives, will gather in Brisbane for the 2025 convention. While the positions taken by the convention are not binding on the parliamentary arm, this year's gathering will be the first in a decade under a state LNP government with power to act on them. the Crisafulli government, or federal Coalition leaders Sussan Ley and David Littleproud.

The Age
a day ago
- The Age
Premier doubles down on suggestion LNP figures viewed top doc pick unfit
The news Queensland Premier David Crisafulli has defended his government's abandoning of the merit-selected appointment of a new chief health officer and has declared he was trying to respect the doctor's privacy by not giving further detail. But Crisafulli doubled-down on the veiled suggestion the decision to scrap the imminent ascension of Dr Krispin Hajkowicz was because he was deemed unfit by senior LNP government figures, despite a rigorous external recruitment process. And, in his first public comments on the matter, Crisafulli continued to deny suggestions a Save Victoria Park sign displayed at his house, along with the historical display of a Greens election corflute known to some in the LNP, had also played a role. Why it matters Hajkowicz is seeking legal advice after his appointment as Dr John Gerrard's permanent successor was abruptly scuttled by the government, despite his selection through the merit-based process run by recruitment agency HardyGroup. It was not the first time Hajkowicz had been selected as CHO – the former Labor government appointed him to the role in 2021, but he decided not to take up the role just days from his official start date, citing personal reasons. After two days of refusing to answer questions, or even acknowledge the decision, a government spokesperson late on Thursday said Hajkowicz's 2021 withdrawal was the reason this appointment had been vetoed. By whom is still unclear.