Interesting Times in DUI (Continued)

October 24th, 2007   Filed Under Legal News  

The Skagit County case regarding the toxicology lab issues has come to a close. The results are disappointing. The article by the Seattle PI provided the following:

Tuesday, the judges found that Gordon and Formoso’s actions amounted to governmental misconduct and that there was evidence that Logan’s “action or inaction” did as well. They also cited other troubles:

  • A computer wasn’t calculating data about the ethanol-water solution correctly, which could lead to “potentially devastating effects” if it miscalculates breath-test results.
  • Lab workers didn’t notice documentation errors, showing “the certifications are not carefully read by the analysts before they are signed.”
  • Scientists who test the solution were trained to discard results that are incorrect.
  • They share a computer password, which could allow them to alter others’ results, raising “the potential for false data entry.”

The judges noted that “we are living in a ‘CSI’ era where the public has come to expect solid scientific evidence in criminal case.”

Although accurately reporting data is essential, they wrote, the importance of making sure that sworn statements are accurate “appears to have been lost on the toxicology lab.”

In the end, the Court denied the defense motion(s) to dismiss as a result of the perjury issue(s) raised. Where jurors trust science to discover truth, we all have been deceived. The current practice of breath testing is questionable, at best. But to add that the people in charge of the State’s toxicology lab have been engaged in falsifying document and committing perjury shocks the conscience.

The fight is by no means over. Defense Attorneys throughout Washington State are preparing to argue this issue in other courts. It is our collective hope that these issues will be won and then addressed at the State toxicology lab.

Interesting Times in DUI (continued)

October 13th, 2007   Filed Under Legal News  

The Ann Marie Gordon/Toxicology lab issue continues to heat up. An interesting article is posted on King 5 news summarizing a recent hearing in Skagit County District Court. As the article notes, this hearing will likely impact how the arguments are heard in other counties.

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October 6th, 2007   Filed Under Uncategorized  

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Expungement at Seattle Municipal Court

October 1st, 2007   Filed Under Expunging a Conviction  

There is a specific process for expungement at Seattle Municipal Court. The situation for which the expungement would apply, according to the court:

(1) The file consists only of non-conviction data;(2) You are not under prosecution and you have not been arrested for or charged with a new crime; and either(3a) Two (2) years or longer has elapsed since the record became non-conviction data as result of the entry of a disposition favorable to you, or(3b) Three (3) years or longer have elapsed from the date of arrest or filing of charges and your are not a fugitive and the case is not still pending in court. 

Under a very narrow limited set of circumstances, at the Seattle Municipal Court, you can seek an expungement. Otherwise, one must seek a vacation of conviction. I think that post-conviction data can, and should, be removed.Updated