- Apr 10, 2000
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Just saw this article about a Massachusetts crime lab chemist falsifying test results. She "visually identified" drug substances instead of performing tests and outright falsified other "evidence" used to convict people. In a career of almost a decade she may have affected as many as 40,000 cases. She plead guilty and received a sentence of 3-5 years for ruining countless lives. The system cannot function when those who prosecute suspects hold getting a conviction higher than getting the truth.
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304607104579214280981721234
http://filmingcops.com/corrupt-gove...cking-countless-innocent-americans-in-prison/
			
			http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304607104579214280981721234
http://filmingcops.com/corrupt-gove...cking-countless-innocent-americans-in-prison/
BOSTONA former state crime-lab chemist who falsified test results in criminal cases was sentenced to three to five years in prison Friday, in connection with a scandal that has thrown the Massachusetts criminal-justice system into turmoil.
In a soft voice, Annie Dookhan pleaded guilty in Suffolk Superior Court to 27 crimes, including tampering with evidence, obstruction of justice and inflating her credentials. She worked at a Massachusetts Department of Public Health laboratory from 2003 to 2012 analyzing drugs seized during criminal arrests.
Ms. Dookhan previously pleaded not guilty but changed her plea Friday. After Judge Carol S. Ball handed down her sentence, the 36-year-old Ms. Dookhan, who didn't speak or show emotion, was led from the courtroom to begin serving her term at a state prison. Prosecutors had asked for between five and seven years of incarceration.
Ms. Dookhan's misdeeds came to light in July 2012 when control of the lab was being transferred to the state's public-safety agency from the health department. Interviewed by investigators in August 2012, Ms. Dookhan, long one of the most productive chemists at the state lab, admitted to visually identifying some drug samples rather than performing the required chemical test, prosecutors said.
State evidence included emails that defense lawyers said showed Ms. Doo khan was too cozy with prosecutors. She wrote to a prosecutor in 2009 that she wanted drug offenders "off the streets." Ms. Dookhan's criminal behavior was driven by "nothing more than her desire to be a productive employee," Judge Ball wrote in the sentencing decision, but the consequences of her actions "have been nothing short of catastrophic."
Massachusetts courts are being deluged with people who have been charged or convicted of drug crimes, with evidence tested at the crime lab, and who are now demanding release from state custody.
As of Nov. 5, superior courts in eight counties had held 2,922 hearings for 950 people as a result of the drug-lab scandal, according to the Massachusetts Court System. Through mid-October, 349 drug offenders had been released by the state Department of Corrections because of crime-lab events, a spokeswoman said.
More releases are likely. An August report by the governor's office said Ms. Dookhan's conduct may have affected more than 40,000 cases.
Massachusetts is one of several states, including Texas and Colorado, where crime-lab problems have raised questions about oversight of the labs.
"The conditions at that lab were atrocious," said Anthony J. Benedetti, chief counsel at Massachusetts Committee for Public Counsel, the state public-defender agency. A state inspector general is expected to release a report soon delving into the operation of the lab.
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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