Home

menu
A WBUR SPECIAL REPORT

BadChemistry

Annie Dookhan And The Massachusetts Drug Lab Crisis

1st Boston Session For Drug Cases Marred By Confusion

News

If Friday’s unprecedented special Boston Municipal Court session is any indicator, the mess left in the wake of the state drug lab scandal is going to take a long time to clean up — and there may be a lot of fighting about it along the way.

Only five of the 19 inmates called to the session Friday actually have cases that are directly linked to Annie Dookhan, the chemist charged with falsifying drug evidence.

Two of the inmates were released on $500 bail.

Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley called the process an embarrassment and criticized officials for bringing so many inmates into court, only to send them back to jail. Conley urged those reviewing cases affected by the scandal to slow down.

“The information that we have at this point is not very good,” Conley said. “That’s why these lists are being refined. We have 19 defendants at this point and my prosecutors tell me that a sizable number of them will not be related to Annie Dookhan at all.”

But some of the defense attorneys involved, like Richard Noone, say even if their clients’ cases are not directly related to tests done by Dookhan, the special counsel reviewing the scandal identified their client for some reason, so they’re taking a closer look.

“There are allegations that she falsified signatures, so it requires further investigation for sure,” Noone said.

Meantime, in Suffolk Superior Court Friday, a drug case was dismissed against Jeffrey Banks because the cocaine he was charged with possessing was tested by Dookhan. A second test showed it was not cocaine. But Banks was sent back to jail in an unrelated case.

Also Friday, an inmate released last month who then didn’t show up for a court appearance this week was arrested in Quincy. Marcus Pixley, who has previous drug convictions and a rape conviction, is now charged with being a fugitive from justice and is being held on $2,000 bail. His attorney says Pixley is being used to frighten the public.

Noone says everyone involved in these cases is going to have to work together, probably for a long time to come.

“All sides — the district attorneys, the defense bar, the Judiciary, the court system — are trying to sort out this mess that’s been created by this person,” he said.

Conley estimates that as many as 500 inmates could be released in Boston alone.

District attorneys across the state are expected to ask for $10 million a year to hire the staff necessary to deal with the thousands of cases affected by the scandal.

Comments

Latest News

May 23, 2013

Drug Defendant’s Guilty Plea Stands Despite Dookhan Connection

A Boston Municipal Court judge has ruled that Brian Bubanas cannot withdraw his guilty plea despite the evidence being tested at the drug lab where Annie Dookhan worked.

May 19, 2013

Still, A Question Persists: How Big Is Drug Lab Crisis?

So far, officials have compiled more than 2 million records related to all drugs tested at the now-closed Hinton state drug lab. But the crisis’ full scope remains an ongoing question.

May 19, 2013

Annie Dookhan And The Massachusetts Drug Lab Crisis

Annie Dookhan has been criminally charged with deliberately manipulating drug tests at the Hinton State Laboratory in Jamaica Plain, Mass., compromising at least 34,000 cases.