Alcotest dwi Breath Test Coordinator N.J. State
Police sergeant charged with records tampering in DWI cases for failure to
conduct proper tests of breath machines
source http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2016/09/state_police_sergeant_charged_with_records_tamperi.html
on September 19, 2016 A New Jersey State Police sergeant has been
charged with records tampering for allegedly skipping a required step in the
calibration of alcohol breath-testing devices, documents show.
The disclosure could open up more than
20,000 DWI cases to court challenges, according to a copy of a letter sent
to court administrators and obtained by NJ Advance Media..
Sgt. Marc
Dennis, a coordinator in the State Police Alcohol Drug Testing Unit, is accused
of third degree tampering with public records and fourth degree falsifying or
tampering with records, according to the letter, sent Monday by the state
Division of Criminal Justice, which brought the charges.
Elie
Honig, the division's director, wrote that Dennis was accused of
deliberately omitting a step in re-calibrating three Alcotest devices — more
commonly known as breathalyzers — which are used to test the intoxication
level of accused drunken drivers.
Lt. Brian Polite, a spokesman for the State Police,
said Monday that Dennis' behavior was noticed by his supervisor and
"immediately reported" to the division's internal affairs unit, the
Office of Professional Standards.
"Once it was determined that there was a
possibility of criminal charges being filed, it was then referred to Division
of Criminal Justice," he said.
In a letter to court
administrators, state prosecutors outlined the technical details of the
accusations against State Police Sgt. Marc Dennis.
But Dennis
calibrated Alcotest instruments in Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean, Somerset,
and Union counties over the course of seven years, and state authorities have
identified 20,667 individual cases involving devices he handled, according
to the letter.
The
accusation could create a tangle of litigation similar to another State Police case involving
a drug lab technician, Kamalkant Shah, who was accused of falsifying test
results in a single marijuana case, bringing nearly 15,000 drug cases into
question.
Honig
said that step, while not scientifically necessary, is required under a
procedure developed by the State Police's chief forensic scientist. That
procedure was created to comply with a state Supreme Court decision regarding
the admissibility of DWI test results in court, known as State v. Chun, the
letter said.
"The
breath test results were not relied upon in reaching the disposition of these
two cases," Honig wrote. "We have notified defense counsel in those
cases of the circumstances described in this letter."
Dennis was suspended without pay. source
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2016/09/state_police_sergeant_charged_with_records_tamperi.html