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Attorney General Josh Kaul is seeking more Crime Lab analysts. Here's what to know about the labs

Attorney General Josh Kaul is seeking more Crime Lab analysts. Here's what to know about the labs

Yahoo06-03-2025

MADISON - Attorney General Josh Kaul and the Department of Justice are asking Republican lawmakers to add analysts in state crime labs to keep up with the growing amount of evidence needed for investigations and prosecutions.
During a tour at the State Crime Lab in Madison on Wednesday, Kaul asked for 19 new positions to be created during the budget process, including analysts for DNA, controlled substances, and firearms.
The Legislature is just beginning its process of setting the biennial budget, which will run from 2025 through 2027, and though agencies typically make requests for new positions or funding through Gov. Tony Evers' budget, which was released last month, the governor doesn't always include all the positions agency heads hope for.
Kaul is hoping to add positions to the labs across the state — located in Madison, Milwaukee and Wausau — in order to process evidence faster and have more analysts available to testify during trials and help district attorneys understand how evidence can be used during a trial.
Here's what we know about the request.
Kaul said there haven't been new analyst positions added in years, and with advances in technology happening more quickly, the labs need more experts.
In past budgets, more prosecutors were added in counties across the state. That's generating more cases that need the work of lab analysts.
"If we have resources at the prosecution or defense level, but we don't have the resources that we need at the crime labs, cases are going to be delayed while we wait for testing to happen," he said.
In his budget released last month, Evers requested a total of six new state crime positions, at a cost of more than $800,000 over the two years of the budget. Kaul's request will come in at just under $2.8 million over the same period.
Kaul said that only adding six positions won't be enough.
"We know that that's a meaningful investment for the legislature to make, but these are not requests that are made without a lot of thought about what the needs of the labs are," he said. "So we are hoping to see the kind of investment that can help ensure that the labs are adequately resourced to do their work in the future."
Ten of the analysts would be hired to work on DNA processing. Three would work in analyzing controlled substances, two would be firearms examiners. Another two would work as forensic science supervisors, while one person would do crime scene response and the final person would handle business automation.
Kaul said evidence backlogs crop up in the state labs at times when analysis need to prioritize evidence in homicides or sexual assaults to ensure law enforcement can apprehend the suspect.
"The Crime Lab is the only laboratory that works on felony level criminal cases, and their expertise is indispensable," Outagamie County District Attorney Mindy Tempelis said. "The labs, analysts and examiners provide vital testing and analysis that help direct investigations, corroborate evidence and ultimately ensure that justice is served."
The analysts not only break down DNA but they also analyze guns, test drugs, and are called in as expert witnesses during trials. They help the jury understand the science behind the evidence and how they reach the conclusions they do.
Testifying can require analysts to travel across the state, taking time away from analyzing evidence waiting in other cases.
"These types of delays impact the case and justice for victims and families as well as defendants," Tempelis said. "This is not just a problem for prosecutors and law enforcement, it's also a problem for victims and for our communities. Timely testing of evidence is a cornerstone of effective law enforcement, and the backlog has real world implications."
Tempelis said advances in technology in recent years have helped to reopen cold cases in Wisconsin. Last year, she was able to prosecute a cold case from 1988 in Outagamie County, thanks to the expertise of the state labs.
"The analyst helped identify a key piece of evidence that hadn't yet been tested that was instrumental in securing the conviction," she said. "She spent countless hours working with me preparing her testimony, and ultimately testified for four hours at the trial."
Kaul said that for the most part, these new analysts would be working on current cases. But more hands on deck could allow the DOJ to help out on more cold cases.
In the coming months, state agencies will have the opportunity to make their case to legislators on funding and positions they need. Legislators will take those requests into consideration.
Republicans, who make up the majority of the Legislature, will then create their own budget proposal.
Evers will have the opportunity to veto parts of the budget he doesn't agree with, and the final budget will be signed into law this summer.
Republican leaders did not immediately respond to questions Wednesday about whether or not they would approve the request from Kaul for more analysts.
Laura Schulte can be reached at leschulte@jrn.com and on X @SchulteLaura.
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Josh Kaul asks for nearly $3.2 million for Crime Lab analysts

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