our reporters, paul carr of the tech blog pando, and katie roo of tech crunch, this week on "press: here." > >>> good morning, everyone. i'm scott mcgroup. president trump signed the act into law. it will change the way police officers book suspects and it has the potential to make a small silicon valley company very, very successful. >> let's take you inside a fictional booking room and yes, this is all done by actors, but i want you to see the process. after the mug shot, after the fingerprinting, someone accused of a felony in california is swabbed and his dna is analyzed in compared to a database of other dna collecteda the crime scenes. if our fictional criminal was arrested for, say, felony hit and run, a nearly-instant match might also place him at the scene of a murder last year. an important point most of this already happens in california. the dna swabbing and the matching and right now that dna is shipped off to a lab. the machine you saw in the video can perform that same test in less than 90 minutes right at the police station. it's made by antigenics, it's produced the rapi