Saturday, March 7, 2026

Deceased pathologist: Charles Harlan: Tennessee: The Christie Carroll case: She was brutally murdered in 1995; Thirty one years later a finger is being pointed at deceased coroner Charles Harlan - as her community raises funds for an exhumation and second autopsy, of, "a beloved mother and daughter whose life was lost too soon," in a story headed, "Years-old cold case may be revived with small-town heart and big community effort", published by The Lewis County Herald, Publisher Amanda Curtis) which notes that: "Christy's autopsy was performed by the late Dr. Charles Harlan, whose actions and professionalism were under question in 1995. During Dr. Harlan's tenure, he misidentified bodies, failed to preserve vital organs and often did not complete specific testing that would provide clearer answers. It is also a well-known and documented fact that Dr. Harlan ruled several deaths as natural, medical, etc., that secondary autopsies proved otherwise, and even more concerning is the fact that in some of these cases, the actual cause should have been very obvious to him. For these reasons, I think it is fair to say we can not just accept as an undisputed fact that he was accurate in his ruling that Christy's probable cause of death was systemic hypothermia and acute ethanolism."


BACKGROUND: From a previous post of this Blog (29 December, 2022) under the heading: "‘Disgraced doc’s evidence sent man to prison. No one knows how many others are like him."...Headnote: "Charles Harlan: Tennessee:  Enough to make one weep: A nightmarish, disgraced medical examiner. He  died in 2013. But the victims of his mistakes and oversights live on, crying out for redress by the appeal  courts, which would much rather look the other way. An important story by 'USA Today' Justice Reporter  Mariah Timms headed: ‘Disgraced doc’s evidence sent man to prison. No one knows how many others are like him’..."Charles Harlan confirmed a patient’s death to her family by fax: “She is green and has maggots crawling on her.”  He once misidentified the bodies of two inmates killed in a car crash and sent their remains, still shackled, to the wrong families.  Once, a Tennessee man was pulled over, alive, two years after Harlan incorrectly identified a burned corpse and declared him dead.  The litany of mistakes and oversights is staggering in retrospect for the former Nashville-area medical examiner.  Decades of significant concerns about Harlan, a key witness in several murder prosecutions that sent Tennesseans to prison for most of their lives, have prompted little remedy.  It's impossible to estimate how many of his cases contained grievous flaws because no one has checked.  Harlan was suspended without pay as an assistant Davidson County medical examiner in 1994. His contract as State Medical Examiner was terminated by 1995. And by 2005, his medical license was permanently stripped. Harlan died in 2013.  Even after losing his position in Nashville, he performed autopsies across much of Tennessee and was trusted by prosecutors to help build cases in the pursuit of justice.  After evaluating Harlan's medical opinions in one 1995 case, Dr. George Nichols, then Kentucky's chief medical examiner, wrote to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation: "If this line of irrational thinking has been applied to other cases in the state of Tennessee, then God help you and the rest of the citizens of Tennessee."


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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Shacie Fielder, Christy's childhood best friend writes this regarding the process leading up to the fundraiser as well as intentions going forward: "31 years ago, the lifeless body of a young mother was found beside the driveway of her Hohenwald, TN home. Christy Lynn Carroll was found deceased on February 6th, 1995, beside the driveway to the home she shared with her parents in Hohenwald, TN. No justice has ever been served, as you read the following, I think you will understand the reasons that her family has long sought acknowledgement of her case and justice."


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SECOND PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "A glimpse of hope came in January 2025, when the DA's office contacted Christy's family and informed them that they would review the file but no updates or further communication has happened.  Please continue to show support for Christy's loved ones in their quest for truth and true closure." "Christy Carroll was my childhood best friend," she  closes. "So many people have reached out to me wanting to help her family so I am opening this Go Fund Me to assist the family in getting an exhumation, a new autopsy, and legal fees associated with her death investigation. This Go Fund Me will go directly to her daughter so that they will finally have answers and Justice for Christy."

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STORY: "Years-old cold case may be revived with small-town heart and big community effort," The Lewis County Herald (Hohenwald Tennessee) reports,  (Owner, Publisher, Editor Amanda Curtis) on March 5, 2026, noting that: 

GIST: "Saturday, February 28th, several friends, family members and community volunteers gathered together to invade the streets of downtown Hohenwald. 

The goal was to raise the remaining funds needed to proceed with the exhumation and second autopsy of Christy Carroll, a beloved mother and daughter whose life was lost too soon. 

Together, they raised over $8,436 to be put with the over $13,000 raised on a "GoFundMe" campaign, and have now exceeded the original goal of $15,000 needed to proceed.

Shacie Fielder, Christy's childhood best friend writes this regarding the process leading up to the fundraiser as well as intentions going forward:

"31 years ago, the lifeless body of a young mother was found beside the driveway of her Hohenwald, TN home. Christy Lynn Carroll was found deceased on February 6th, 1995, beside the driveway to the home she shared with her parents in Hohenwald, TN.

 No justice has ever been served, as you read the following, I think you will understand the reasons that her family has long sought acknowledgement of her case and justice.

As noted by investigators, she had blood covering her face and contusions on the left side of her groin and thigh. 

Her clothes were muddy; her pants were down, and her shirt was pulled up and torn. 

She was still wearing her jewelry, but her shoes were missing.

 Christy's autopsy was performed by the late Dr. Charles Harlan, whose actions and professionalism were under question in 1995. 

During Dr. Harlan's tenure, he misidentified bodies, failed to preserve vital organs and often did not complete specific testing that would provide clearer answers.

 It is also a well-known and documented fact that Dr. Harlan ruled several deaths as natural, medical, etc., that secondary autopsies proved otherwise, and even more concerning is the fact that in some of these cases, the actual cause should have been very obvious to him.

 For these reasons, I think it is fair to say we can not just accept as an undisputed fact that he was accurate in his ruling that Christy's probable cause of death was systemic hypothermia and acute ethanolism.

 Her blood alcohol level was reported as 0.01% gram of ethyl alcohol. 

Dr. Harlan did, however, note that there was blood on her face from her mouth and nose, a contusion on her face, and contusions on her groin and thigh.

 Unfortunately, he failed to perform a rape kit. (It is also worth noting that her death is listed wrongly as 2/6/1994 in the report of Investigation by State Medical Examiner.)

The events that transpired before the discovery of Christy's body are as follows.

On February 4th, 1995, Christy went to a bar with an unnamed female friend, while there they ran into Christy's brother Ted and his friends. 

They asked for a ride back to Christy's friends house but the driver couldn't take them. 

Christy's friend found another ride and Christy stayed back to hang out with her brother. 

They rode around town and ran into Daniel Lay (now deceased) and Eric Amacher. 

Daniel and Eric said they would take Christy back to her friends house. 

Christy was seen alive for the last time shortly before midnight when a deputy spotted her, Daniel and Eric in a vehicle on the side of the road. 

Daniel told the officer that the vehicle had overheated but declined assistance. 

A call reporting a suspicious male walking near the area where the car overheated was placed around 2:00 am on February 5th, 1995. 

When officers arrived they found Eric alone leaving the scene of an accident in which he had wrecked a different vehicle. 

In the days following the discovery of her body, Daniel and Eric were questioned by the police.

 They said they propositioned Christy, but she declined the offer. 

They dropped her off at her residence between 12:30 am and 1:00 am on February 5th, 1995.

 Eric stated to police that he walked her to her door.

 I know the dates seem confusing so for clarification Christy was last seen alive on February 4th, Eric and Daniel claimed they dropped her off between 12:30 am and 1:00 am on February 5th and her body was discovered by a mail carrier around 3:30 pm on February 6th.

 It is also worth noting that on February 5th, 1995 Christy's family drove by the exact spot where her body was found 4 different times without seeing her there leading them to believe that she was not there until February 6th, 1995. 

A glimpse of hope came in January 2025, when the DA's office contacted Christy's family and informed them that they would review the file but no updates or further communication has happened. 

Please continue to show support for Christy's loved ones in their quest for truth and true closure."

"Christy Carroll was my childhood best friend," she closes. "So many people have reached out to me wanting to help her family so I am opening this Go Fund Me to assist the family in getting an exhumation, a new autopsy, and legal fees associated with her death investigation. This Go Fund Me will go directly to her daughter so that they will finally have answers and Justice for Christy."

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.lewisherald.com/story/2026/03/05/news/years-old-cold-case-may-be-revived-with-small-town-heart-and-big-community-effort/11833.html

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


 FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!

Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;

Friday, March 6, 2026

Technology: Flock Safety 'AI' licence reader): From our 'welcome trends' department: Fortune story (by News Editor Catherine Gioino) on unexpected repercussions of Amazon's cutting off ties with Flock (a lost dog story with an unexpected twist) shows increased public recognition across America of its potential to intrude on personal privacy..."In a controversial yet viral ad for Amazon’s Ring that premiered during the Super Bowl, a user uploaded a photo of a lost dog so participating homes in Ring’s Search Party feature can scan their footage to find that lost dog. What started as a heartwarming story of reunification culminated in millions of Americans shocked at how “creepy” the tech was, and how it could be manipulated into nefarious purposes, such as tracking individuals and finding their current whereabouts."


PASSAGE  ONE OF THE DAY: "Flock, a company that sells networks of roadside cameras and software to police departments, businesses, and neighborhoods to identify vehicles and feed that data into searchable law-enforcement databases, is active in more than 5,000 U.S. cities. 

The software scans license plates and uses integrated video tools to log plates, time, and location, then alerts police when a vehicle matches a “hot list” or is linked to an investigation."


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PASSAGE  TWO OF THE DAY: "Now cities are similarly following suit and cancelling their own contracts with the software company. Cities from Flagstaff, Ariz., to Windsor, Conn., have joined more than 30 other cities across the country that have either suspended, if not fully terminated, their partnership with Flock. Since the beginning of 2025, at least 30 cities have canceled their contracts with Flock, including Eugene, Ore.; Hillsborough, N.C.; and Santa Cruz, Calif. Flagstaff Mayor Becky Daggett told NPR “community outrage” made it clear the technology would not be received well, even as she had high hopes to use the technology."


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PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY: "The public outcry has been growing.  The open-source app DeFlock.org recently launched to track the location of more than 77,000 AI license-plate readers across the country, with the app’s creators arguing the scanners have create a detailed “location history” of ordinary residents, leading to racial profiling and potential stalking by officers."


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STORY: "Cities join Amazon in cutting ties with  licence-plate reader Flock following Ring's Super Bowl ad that Flock didn't have anything to do with," News Editor (Catherine Gioino) reports in Fortune,  on March 3, 2026. (Catherina Gioino is a news editor at Fortune, covering markets, the economy, energy, tech, and AI. She covered breaking news for the New York Daily News and MSNBC, and reported on political and legal issues for The Sun and Rolling Stone, including the Trump Hush Money trial. She earned a dual Bachelor's and Master of Public Administration from Columbia University, where she cowrote now-enacted legislation regarding indigenous community land rights in Peru, and previously worked in sustainable transportation policy for two micromobility startups after running for City Council in her hometown in Queens.)


Gist: "In a controversial yet viral ad for Amazon’s Ring that premiered during the Super Bowl, a user uploaded a photo of a lost dog so participating homes in Ring’s Search Party feature can scan their footage to find that lost dog.


 What started as a heartwarming story of reunification culminated in millions of Americans shocked at how “creepy” the tech was, and how it could be manipulated into nefarious purposes, such as tracking individuals and finding their current whereabouts. 

]

The ad portrayed Ring’s Search Party feature, notably different than the Community Requests feature Ring and Flock had initially partnered on to integrate technologies. 


Ring terminated its contract with Flock Safety, an AI-powered license reader used by (or, formerly for some) police precincts across the country.


 Flock, a company that sells networks of roadside cameras and software to police departments, businesses, and neighborhoods to identify vehicles and feed that data into searchable law-enforcement databases, is active in more than 5,000 U.S. cities. 


The software scans license plates and uses integrated video tools to log plates, time, and location, then alerts police when a vehicle matches a “hot list” or is linked to an investigation.


But Ring’s Super Bowl commercial, regardless of the fact it featured Ring technology and not Flock’s, made millions wary of the software company’s large camera and data network, and how it could be easily repurposed to not only scan license plates but something more.


“Flock’s intended integration with Community Requests has been cancelled,” a Ring spokesperson told Fortune. “This integration was never live, and no videos were ever shared between these services. Following a comprehensive review, we determined the planned Flock Safety integration would require significantly more time and resources than anticipated. We therefore made the joint decision to cancel the integration.”


This move occurred amid escalating concerns regarding privacy, civil liberties, and the role of private tech companies in federal law enforcement activities.


A spokesperson for Flock told Fortune: “We didn’t know the Super Bowl ad was coming, and we didn’t have anything to do with it.”


Instead, Flock and Ring agreed the integration to improve Community Requests would prove difficult with current resources, the Flock spokesperson added.


Now cities are similarly following suit and cancelling their own contracts with the software company. Cities from Flagstaff, Ariz., to Windsor, Conn., have joined more than 30 other cities across the country that have either suspended, if not fully terminated, their partnership with Flock.


Since the beginning of 2025, at least 30 cities have canceled their contracts with Flock, including Eugene, Ore.; Hillsborough, N.C.; and Santa Cruz, Calif. Flagstaff Mayor Becky Daggett told NPR “community outrage” made it clear the technology would not be received well, even as she had high hopes to use the technology.


“In the end, it was just clear that this wasn’t going to be a technology that was going to be well received or that we could continue to use,” Daggett told NPR.


“I think that the mayor said it almost better than I could say it myself,” the Flock spokesperson told Fortune. “Communities that are removing Flock are just doing themselves a disservice, without addressing the underlying concerns that are actually at issue,” the spokesperson added, saying the company has put guardrails in place to work with communities to address any privacy concerns they might have.


“Flock is able to configure our system so that it can align with any community or any state’s local laws and local values,” the spokesperson said, referencing the company’s work in San Francisco and Oakland, Calif., in which the two cities have regulation preventing license-plate readers from working with immigration enforcement—something with which Flock was already aligned. “We’ve actually hard-coded guardrails that prevent that. So we have a filter that would block any immigration related searches that is automatically applied across California.”


In a statement to Fortune, the City of Santa Cruz said Flock had notified the city its system architecture was in violation of two state bills “that unintentionally allowed law enforcement agencies outside of California to search data from agencies across the country, including Santa Cruz.”


 The bills, SB34 and SB54, relate to the security and privacy procedures of automatic license plate reader operators in the state, and the notification to federal authorities when a person who is arrested for a violation of a controlled substance is not a U.S. citizen.


Flock informed Santa Cruz that the violations stopped on Feb. 11, adding the company implemented system changes ” to prevent recurrence, including deactivating the National Search Tool for California agencies, revoking the ability for California agencies to create one-on-one data-sharing relationships with agencies outside of California, and adding filters to block searches related to ICE, Border Patrol, immigration, or similar terms.”


 But, “ultimately, the Santa Cruz City Council voted to terminate the City’s contract with Flock,” the Santa Cruz official said in a statement. The city had eight automatic license plate reader cameras that are no longer in use.


Other cities echo Flock’s sentiment. “Over the past several years, the Windsor Police Department has had a cooperative relationship with Flock Safety,” an assistant to the town manager of Windsor, Conn., told Fortune. “The department has utilized the technology as one of many tools intended to assist in investigations and locate stolen vehicles and missing persons. While the cameras have contributed valuable investigative information, they have always represented just one component of our overall public safety strategy.”


However, major metropolitan departments have begun to push back on Flock’s standard terms. 


The Boston Police Department and the Massachusetts ACLU demanded changes to their user agreement to ensure they could restrict data sharing, bypassing Flock’s default clause, which grants the company a “worldwide, perpetual, royalty-free” license to disclose agency data for “investigative purposes.”


The de-flocking continues

Jamie Siminoff, the founder of Ring who recently returned as CEO to re-embrace the company’s original mission of reducing neighborhood crime, expressed deep disappointment about the public’s reaction. 


In a series of reflections on the feature’s launch, Siminoff defended the tool’s utility and its privacy protections.


Later, addressing the viral criticism, he remarked: “It was a shame,” Siminoff told Fortune. “The misunderstanding of it is what makes me sad, because it’s like people sort of made their own narrative of how it works.” He emphasized the system is entirely voluntary, explaining if a neighbor chooses not to share footage, “your privacy is totally fine, no one knows.” Siminoff maintained the digital system was simply a more efficient version of calling a phone number on a dog’s tag, adding, “I do think it’s a very good-for-the-world thing.”


Announced in October 2025, the Flock-Ring deal was intended to integrate Ring’s Community Requests feature with Flock’s software, allowing police to more easily request and receive footage from private homes.


The partnership drew scrutiny because of Flock’s reported ties to federal agencies. But the Flock spokesperson dismissed these ties as rumors, saying: “We do not have any contracts with any of them, which means they cannot directly access data on the platform.”


The public outcry has been growing.


 The open-source app DeFlock.org recently launched to track the location of more than 77,000 AI license-plate readers across the country, with the app’s creators arguing the scanners have create a detailed “location history” of ordinary residents, leading to racial profiling and potential stalking by officers. 


The Flock spokesperson said the technology just shows a license plate at one location at a single point and place in time.


The company is working to implement more guardrails to address any community concerns, adding: “We are ready to work with any of those cities again, should they choose.”


While the contract terminated, Ring said the public sentiment does prove one thing: People want to feel safe in their neighborhoods.


“So while the controversy was sort of high in the social media area,” Siminoff told Fortune, “I’m not sure how much of a percentage of that actually translated into like, population.

“I think a lot of people actually are pretty psyched about safer neighborhoods and returning dogs with a company like Ring maintaining your privacy.""


Additional reporting contributed by Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez.


The entire story can be read at:


https://fortune.com/2026/03/03/cities-end-flock-partnership-amazon-ring-surveillance-super-bowl-ad/


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


 FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!

Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;