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Crime

DC police data glitch may have messed up thousands of cases

The U.S. Attorney's Office has already ordered an audit.

The Metropolitan Police Department may have misplaced key evidence in past and current cases. (Photo by Flickr user West Midlands Police, used under a Creative Commons license)

Flaws in the Metropolitan Police Department’s data management system possibly led to the widespread misplacement of evidence, departing U.S. Attorney Ronald Machen said Monday in a letter to defense attorneys.
The Wall Street Journal reports:

Authorities have begun sifting through thousands of cases to determine the scope and extent of the problem, including how many cases might have to be reopened. Police and prosecutors are conducting a review to determine if any exculpatory evidence accidentally was withheld from defendants past or present, Mr. Machen’s letter said.

The MPD has used the data program, called I/Leads, since 2011 and was planning to switch it in August.
As the Washington Post notes:

Defense attorney Danny Onorato said it was “astonishing” that D.C. police did not have safeguards in place to ensure that data was accurate and complete. “One can only hope that no one was wrongfully convicted as a result of this mishap.”

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Companies: Washington Metropolitan Police Department
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