This is very sad for the victims of any crimes that will be dismissed because of this.Quote:
Public servant assaults, felony DWI and drug case among those dismissed after errant Schertz PD evidence purge
Seven felony counts dismissed by Guadalupe County Attorney on Wednesday, three misdemeanor dismissals pending
SCHERTZ, Texas The Guadalupe County Attorney this week dismissed felony cases against five defendants after evidence in each of the criminal matters was improperly destroyed by the Schertz Police Department, court records obtained by KSAT Investigates show.
The move by prosecutors was the latest step in the months-long fallout from over a decade's worth of evidence being destroyed or removed from the department's property room without prosecutorial review.
A Feb. 15 letter from Guadalupe County Attorney David Willborn accused Schertz PD of asking judges to sign destruction orders for drug evidence and weapons without them being reviewed by prosecuting agencies.
Wow, just wow.Quote:
Schertz police officials confirmed last week that 1,047 cases mostly in Guadalupe County were impacted by the purge.
A Schertz spokeswoman confirmed last week that no officers were suspended as a result of the incident, but were instead coached or counseled.
The department was also reviewing and updating its policies and processes as of last week, the spokeswoman said.
Dismissals signed Wednesday
Robinson-Torres-Torres
So very sad and frustrating.Quote:
Among the cases dismissed by Willborn on Wednesday were two counts of assaulting a public servant filed against defendant Adriana Torres in 2013.
Torres had failed to appear in court for a scheduled plea hearing in the case in late August of 2014, Guadalupe County court records show.
Prosecutors also dismissed an evading-arrest-with-a-motor-vehicle charge against defendant Rafael Garcia.
Two counts of credit card abuse were dismissed for defendant Cathryn Gunther as well as a drug possession case against defendant Michael Robinson.
There had been no updates in Robinson's criminal case since May 2016, records show.
Luis Torres, a repeat drunk driver, had a felony DWI case dismissed, according to court filings.
He had previously failed to appear in court for the case in December 2015, records show.
Three misdemeanor cases are in the process of being dismissed as well, Willborn confirmed this week.
I guess no one gets fired anymore.
Just do your job, put it in the ditch, rinse, repeat.