Po wicej informacji i plany budynkw prosz klikn w ten link. If you're a human and see this, please ignore it. Sonja Farak pleaded guilty in 2014 to stealing drugs from the Amherst lab. The scandal, in which drug tests were either tampered with or tainted by theft at the now-closed Hinton andthe state laboratory in Amherst,has cost Massachusetts taxpayers at least $30 million to remedy. The American Civil Liberties Union is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in this country by the Constitution and laws of the United States of America. The new data reveals important information about the extent of the drug cases tainted by the Dookhan scandal and about the challenges of using a case-by-case approach to try to remedy the wrongful convictions of the Dookhan-Farak Era: From 2003-2012, Dookhans work accounted for approximately 24,481 cases in which prosecutors obtained adverse dispositions (including guilty pleas) for drug charges, including: Approximately 2,255 cases in Bristol County, Approximately 1,322 cases in the Cape and Islands, Approximately 4,216 cases in Essex County, Approximately 3,540 cases in Middlesex County, Approximately 2,361 cases in Norfolk County, Approximately 2,097 cases in Plymouth County, Approximately 8,690 cases in Suffolk County. In 2009, she had a miscarriage and other personal problems," O'Brien, the co-worker, told state police. We need a comprehensive solution, said Dan Marx, attorney with Foley Hoag LLP. Drug lab cases information Nationwide, the drug war has failed to reduce drug addiction, but this astounding series of revelations highlights the ways in which it has also sown injustice. These revelations follow last weeks report from the Massachusetts Attorney Generals Office, written at the request of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, which found that Massachusetts is also confronted with a second enormous lab scandal arising from misconduct by chemist Sonja Farak at another state drug lab, in Amherst. Potentially hundreds of thousands of other defendants could still challenge their convictions, according to the public defender's office.
