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Pillaged Braintree police evidence room: Massachusetts; Major Development: The Massachusetts Attorney General's Office is now investigating Braintree police evidence room after county prosecutors dismissed six cases this week and said hundreds more are under review, reports O'Ryan Johnson. (Boston Herald)..."The state attorney general is now investigating the Braintree police evidence room after county prosecutors dismissed six cases this week and said hundreds more are under review. “We’ve been contacting defense attorneys with what we learned, as we learned it,” said David Traub, spokesman for Norfolk District Attorney Michael W. Morrissey. “Obviously, when you have problems with the chain of custody and evidence that can’t be accounted for, it creates fair trial issues.” ..." Due to potential conflicts of interest, Morrissey’s office asked Attorney General Maura Healey’s office to look at the evidence room as well. Her office confirmed last night the case had been referred there, but had no further comment.......“Basically, we learned that there is an issue of locating drugs — there are drug cases where evidence was tampered with or missing — and there is money that is either unaccounted for or missing,” Morrissey said. He said the audit also determined “a number of guns were unaccounted for.”

Next: Pillaged Braintree police evidence room: Massacusetts; (Call the cops! HL); Patriot Ledger story says audit indicates $407,998 and 60 guns missing from evidence room..." An audit of the Braintree Police Department’s evidence room found thousands of items – including drugs, cash and guns – missing or unaccounted for, and sloppy record-keeping. Town officials released the audit report at a press conference Wednesday. Problems with evidence have already caused prosecutors to drop charges in a half-dozen Braintree cases and could result in hundreds of additional cases being dismissed. The audit found that 4,709 pieces of narcotics evidence could not be accounted for, and that 38 pieces had been compromised – having been opened, left unpackaged or found to have items missing. The audit report describes much of the missing drugs as “bags of cocaine.” “The narcotics evidence is being stored haphazardly,” the audit found. “It should be stored chronologically by year and the Braintree Police property number.” Also found to be missing were 2,490 pieces of property evidence, the report states. The audit found that some of videos being stored as evidence were left unlabeled, and that test kits from sexual assault cases were stored in a trailer outside the police station. It also found that about $408,000 in seized cash was missing. Some of the evidence bags containing money are described in the audit report as having been ripped open in the back or cut open at the bottom, with cash missing. Much of the unaccounted-for money is from cases from 2001, 2002, 2012 and 2013. The audit lists $82,074.96 missing from 2001. The audit report also lists 60 missing firearms.'
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"The state attorney general is now investigating the Braintree police evidence room after county prosecutors dismissed six cases this week and said hundreds more are under review. “We’ve been contacting defense attorneys with what we learned, as we learned it,” said David Traub, spokesman for Norfolk District Attorney Michael W. Morrissey. “Obviously, when you have problems with the chain of custody and evidence that can’t be accounted for, it creates fair trial issues.” An audit of the police department’s evidence room carried out by the city found missing drugs, guns and cash, Morrissey’s office said. Prosecutors in his office are reviewing between 200 and 400 criminal drug cases as a result of the audit to determine the scope of the problem.  Due to potential conflicts of interest, Morrissey’s office asked Attorney General Maura Healey’s office to look at the evidence room as well. Her office confirmed last night the case had been referred there, but had no further comment.......“Basically, we learned that there is an issue of locating drugs — there are drug cases where evidence was tampered with or missing — and there is money that is either unaccounted for or missing,” Morrissey said. He said the audit also determined “a number of guns were unaccounted for.”

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