QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Tyler Flood, president of the Harris County Criminal Lawyers
Association, said Thursday that defense lawyers in the organization have
been given unofficial estimates by prosecutors overseeing some of the
cases that may be affected. "It could really affect a lot of cases," Flood said. "It's an administrative nightmare for the DA's office.""
STORY:"Thousands of criminal cases under review after latest evidence problems surface, by reporter Brian Rogers, published by The Houston Chronical on October 20, 2016. (Thanks to The Wrongful Conviction Blog for bringing this story to our attention. HL.)
GIST: More than 4,200 criminal cases involving 15,000 pieces of evidence
may have been compromised after a sprinkler malfunctioned Tuesday in the
Houston Police Department's property room, according to Houston's
criminal defense bar. Tyler Flood, president of the Harris County Criminal Lawyers
Association, said Thursday that defense lawyers in the organization have
been given unofficial estimates by prosecutors overseeing some of the
cases that may be affected "It could really affect a lot of cases," Flood said. "It's an administrative nightmare for the DA's office." Authorities Thursday would not confirm those numbers, saying the
clean-up is ongoing and official estimates would not be available for
days. "At this time we have no comment other than we have made the defense
bar and the public defender's office aware of the situation," said Jeff
McShan, spokesman for the district attorney's office. The office is working with the Houston Police Department to get the
situation under control, said acting Police Chief Martha Montalvo. "At about 12:15 p.m. (Tuesday), HPD Property Room commanders were
advised of a sprinkler malfunction confined to a relatively small area
in the property room freezer, which caused water damage to some
cardboard boxes and envelopes that contain evidence," Montalvo said in a
statement. "Most of the evidence is contained in a Ziplock bag or
plastic container placed inside a box or envelope for storage." Montalvo said property room technicians are being aided by lab
workers with the Houston Forensic Science Center to ensure evidence is
handled properly and to repackage everything that was affected. "Until all affected items are opened and inspected, there is no
determination if any evidence has or has not been compromised," Montalvo
said. The Houston Forensic Science Center is an independent crime lab that
was created in the wake of widespread problems with HPD's crime lab. Ramit Plushnick-Masti, a spokeswoman for the independent agency, said
lab workers were invited in to help clean up and ensure that evidence
is not cross-contaminated. Evidence in criminal cases has to adhere to a strict chain of custody
to be admissible in court, and the HFSC lab workers would be qualified
to maintain that chain. The disclosure comes on the heels of several evidence room snafus
lately that have spurred talks of a centralized evidence room for all of
the law enforcement agencies across Harris County. Last month saw public revelations that deputies at the Harris County
Precinct 4 Constable's Office improperly destroyed more than 20,000
pieces of evidence, forcing the district attorney's office to dismiss
more than 150 pending criminal cases and potentially endangering more
than 1,000 others."
http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Thousands-of-criminal-cases-under-review-after-9989250.php