Crime

To Catch a Thief, There’s DNA Spray

CrimeJun 26, 2019

To Catch a Thief, There’s DNA Spray

The Intruder Spray System is used in banks and convenience stores in Europe, and now has been installed in a high-end watch boutique on New York’s 57th Street.

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What a suspect’s hands would look like if hit with a canister of synthetic DNA spray. The forensic technology is manufactured in SelectaDNA’s labs.

New York—The company behind the fine, harmless mist that’s been deployed to deter and detain thieves in Europe for a decade is making a push into the U.S. market.

SelectaDNA’s Intruder Spray System (ISS) uses forensic markers, or DNA, but not the same kind police use to crack the cold cases featured on “Dateline” or that led to the arrest of the man believed to be the Golden State Killer after three decades.

What’s used in ISS is synthetic DNA that, just like human DNA, can be used to tie suspects to a particular place and time.

Installed at points of entry and exit, the system works by spraying the perpetrator or perpetrators with a fine, non-toxic water-based mist dispensed from a canister that’s about the size of a standard aerosol cleaner or beauty product.  

The canisters can be installed anywhere—above doors, by windows, in ceilings, in walls, or in the ground—and the spray is triggered in a number of ways, said Joe Maltese, who is handling sales and marketing for SelectaDNA in the United States.

It can be integrated with a store’s security system or wired to its motion detectors so it hits people who trip the alarm, or activated manually via panic buttons or money clips, meaning jewelers who are in the store during a robbery can press a button to spray the perpetrator on his or her way out.


While the Intruder Spray System can be used to tie criminals to the scene of a crime, “our whole focus is deterrence and prevention,” Joe Maltese said. The company can customize signage for any store, as seen here, that lets potential perpetrators know ISS is in use.

A high-tech version of the dye packs invented in the ‘60s to foil bank robberies, the spray marks the suspect with an invisible, odorless substance that stays on his or her skin for 4-6 weeks and on clothing for a bit longer, up to three months.

If the suspect is taken into custody during that time, the mist will show up under a special-frequency ultraviolet light. Police can then take a swab and send it to the SelectaDNA lab for analysis.

Maltese explained that the spray in each canister has its own long, unique code that’s used only once, so when the lab receives a swab, it can say with 100 percent accuracy that particular spray

came from a specific canister, which was activated at a particular store on a specific day and time.

“It’s impossible that they [the suspects] were not there because that code is never used again,” he said while pointing out that the forensic marker is used in concert with other evidence, such as first-hand accounts and surveillance video, to help prosecute suspects.

The cost varies depending on the size and complexity of the system, but Maltese said plans start around $80 a month. There is also a $240 fee to replace each canister. The canisters must be replaced every time they’re activated, or once a year if they haven’t been used.

WATCH: The Intruder Spray System in Action

SelectaDNA’s Intruder Spray System, which is distributed through CSI Protect in North America, is used in 46 countries by banks, fast-food chains, convenience stores and jewelry companies including TAG Heuer, Pandora, Chanel, and Watchfinder & Co.


The façade of the Richard Mille boutique on 57th Street. The store, which opened in October 2018, recently became the first watch or jewelry store in the U.S. to try the Intruder Spray System. (Photo credit: Philippe Louzon)

Originally piloted in the U.S. market in 2015, ISS is currently installed in five places here: a rare book store in Florida, two convenience stores, one major national retail chain Maltese said he can’t name because of a non-disclosure agreement, and one watch boutique—the Richard Mille flagship on 57th Street in New York.

The high-end watchmaker is the first retailer in New York state to use it, marking the first adoption of the technology by a watch or jewelry retailer in the U.S., a market that SelectaDNA is looking to break into (no pun intended).  

In a statement emailed to National Jeweler, Richard Mille said it learned of the system in Europe and found it to be a “worthwhile addition” to the new flagship location in Manhattan.

Questions & Answers
As with any security system, there are, of course, some drawbacks and questions about the Intruder Spray System.

No. 1 is awareness. Police have to be educated about the system so they know to look for the invisible film and have the proper equipment to detect it.  

Maltese acknowledged that the company’s efforts to educate law enforcement agencies across the entire United States are akin to a “marathon;” they will be ongoing for years because of the size of the market. In New York, the company is working with the state sheriff’s association, and in Florida, they’re working with the Florida Law Enforcement Exchange.

Jewelers’ Security Alliance President John J. Kennedy described ISS’s adoption as a “long-term proposition.”

“[The system is] going to have to become accepted and widely used and the police are going to have to be knowledgeable about it,” he said. “There’s a big learning curve here.”


Pictured here are the ISS’s forensic canister (bottom of photo), control box (upper left) and two different types of spray heads, the curve (upper right) and the slimline (center). Where a store wants the system installed determines which spray heads are used.

Kennedy brought up another concern he has with the system—the fear of retaliation from criminals if they realize they’ve been sprayed.

“When there’s nobody in the store, like in a burglary, it seems less risky; they won’t hurt anybody,” he said. “In a robbery situation, however, I just hope it doesn’t precipitate violence or retaliation.”

Maltese said criminals don’t notice that they’ve been sprayed, as they are usually charged with adrenaline and focused on one task—getting out of the store they robbed as quickly as possible. He added that there have been zero incidents of a criminal retaliating after being sprayed.

Kennedy said the JSA does not endorse any specific products or companies, but he did allow that he thinks SelectaDNA “has the best handle” on the DNA spray technology and are working with police departments and the industry in a “sensible way” to try to get it into jewelry stores and offices. 

SelectaDNA is one of a fresh crop of companies popping up to pitch technology-based security solutions to the jewelry industry. It is a revival of the boom seen in the mid-1990s, before the dot-com bubble burst, that’s been made possible by the availability of startup money and advances in technology.

Kennedy said JSA is always on the lookout for new technologies that could aid with security and the rest of the industry should be too.

He said, “Retailers and other jewelers should keep abreast of things to see what will apply to their own businesses.”

Michelle Graffis the editor-in-chief at National Jeweler, directing the publication’s coverage both online and in print.

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