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Texas murder suspect released after massive police data loss puts trial evidence in jeopardy |
2021-08-18 |
![]() Jonathan "P-Money" Pitts, accused of fatally shooting Shun "Big Youngster" Handy during an argument on Jan. 28, 2019, was seen wearing a mask and an ankle monitor on Monday while walking out of the Frank Crowley Courts Building in Dallas. District Judge Ernie White was forced to release him on a personal recognizance bond, the Dallas Morning News reported. Under state law, pretrial detention is prohibited when prosecutors aren’t ready to begin trial on the scheduled date, Pitts’ defense attorney, George Ashford III, said. His trial was supposed to begin last Thursday, but prosecutors are seeking more time as a city audit is conducted into the loss of eight terabytes of data, which the Dallas Police Department said was permanently deleted months ago when a city IT employee was migrating police evidence from a cloud system to another server. Dallas City Manager T.C. Broadnax said the data loss included photos, videos, audio, case notes and other files related to a yet-to-be determined number of cases. Just one terabyte alone is capable of storing 250,000 photos and 6 million documents, Fox 4 reported. The deletion happened between March 31 and April 5, but the Dallas Police Department did not make District Attorney John Creuzot’s office aware of the loss of data until about two weeks ago when prosecutors from different cases began inquiring about missing evidence. Dallas police do not believe any evidence was lost in connection to Pitts’ case, but a detective told the judge the morning the trial was set to begin that he could not be sure until the city audit was completed. It’s unclear at this whether the data loss will prevent prosecution from moving forward. |
Posted by:Skidmark |
#6 True. But shortcuts get taken sometimes--like not checking that a backup actually has data on it, or not verifying that you can get your cloudy data back again. |
Posted by: james 2021-08-18 12:16 |
#5 eight terabytes of data, which the Dallas Police Department said was permanently deleted months ago when a city IT employee was migrating police evidence from a cloud system to another server. This smells fishy. The whole point of a cloud is things don't get deleted permanently. Also the should be a back up of the data pre-migration before the data is actually moved. |
Posted by: Hupoque Wittlesbach5189 2021-08-18 10:20 |
#4 I don't see why there was even a trial. They should give 'P-Money' his gun back and insist he kill more of his kind. Think of it as time served and community service. |
Posted by: Dron66046 2021-08-18 09:49 |
#3 Don't worry - you can arrest him after he kills again. |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2021-08-18 09:37 |
#2 A staple of good crime fiction is the purloined r-kive box of stale evidence that yields a new clue on the living room floor of the disgraced detective who stole it from the dusty archives. Now, "computer crashed. it's gone..." |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2021-08-18 09:31 |
#1 Under state law, pretrial detention is prohibited when prosecutors aren’t ready to begin trial on the scheduled date Not to be confused with the District of Columbia, in which prosecutors have said they will not be able to provide possible exculpatory evidence till 2022, leaving 'accused' languishing in jail. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2021-08-18 06:07 |