Chemist Admits to Mass Misconduct

An analyst that worked for a state drug lab in Massachusetts has confessed to mishandling evidence in tens of thousands of drug cases.

Written byBob Grant
| 1 min read

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About 34,000 drug cases in the Massachusetts legal system are imperiled by the misconduct of a single chemist who used to work in a now-shuttered Department of Public Health lab. Annie Dookhan, a chemist whose job was to analyze evidence gathered during arrests and investigations in narcotics cases, has admitted to improperly removing evidence from storage lockers, failing to perform proper tests on the drug evidence, and forging colleagues signatures for "two or three years," according to a State Police report obtained by the Boston Globe. “I messed up. I messed up bad. It’s my fault,” Dookhan told the state troopers last month (August 28), insisting that she acted alone. “I don’t want the lab to get in trouble.”

But Dookhan's sweeping misconduct caused the closure of the Jamaica Plain lab in August, and many of her supervisors have resigned or have been fired in the wake of the scandal, ...

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Meet the Author

  • From 2017 to 2022, Bob Grant was Editor in Chief of The Scientist, where he started in 2007 as a Staff Writer. Before joining the team, he worked as a reporter at Audubon and earned a master’s degree in science journalism from New York University. In his previous life, he pursued a career in science, getting a bachelor’s degree in wildlife biology from Montana State University and a master’s degree in marine biology from the College of Charleston in South Carolina. Bob edited Reading Frames and other sections of the magazine.

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