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Colorado
Related: About this forumColorado crime lab analyst altered DNA evidence in hundreds of cases, prosecutors say
Hat tip, the now unavailable to me Washington Post
Colorado crime lab analyst altered DNA evidence in hundreds of cases, prosecutors say
Former CBI scientist Missy Woods, accused of mishandling DNA, charged with 102 felonies
"She was asked again if she deleted the data from the spreadsheet to simply move specific cases forward quickly, to avoid having to do additional work and she agreed," the affidavit reads.
By: Stephanie Butzer
Posted 4:27 PM, Jan 22, 2025 and last updated 4:20 PM, Jan 23, 2025
DENVER A former Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) forensic scientist accused of mishandling DNA and impacting more than 1,000 cases has been charged with 102 felonies.
Yvonne "Missy" Woods turned herself into the Jefferson County Jail on Wednesday afternoon and has been charged with 48 counts of attempting to influence a public servant, 52 counts of forgery of a government-issued document, one count of perjury and one count of cybercrime with damage of more than $1 million. The cybercrime charge is a Class 2 felony, while the others are Class 4 and 5 felonies.
The First Judicial District Attorney's Office said the counts are in connection with 58 instances of alleged criminal misconduct between 2008 and 2023. An affidavit for an arrest warrant outlined those 58 criminal cases, which included homicides, sexual assaults (including two a child), arson, child trafficking, robberies, burglaries, missing persons and more in Denver, Wheat Ridge, Englewood, Lakewood, Jefferson County, Black Hawk, Boulder, Boulder County, Loveland, Lafayette, Arapahoe County, Adams County, Broomfield, Arvada, Aurora, Longmont, Fraser/Winter Park, Westminster, Thornton, Larimer County, Greeley, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Fremont County and El Paso County.
Her cash-only bond was set at $50,000. Woods is expected in court on Thursday.
{snip}
"She was asked again if she deleted the data from the spreadsheet to simply move specific cases forward quickly, to avoid having to do additional work and she agreed," the affidavit reads.
By: Stephanie Butzer
Posted 4:27 PM, Jan 22, 2025 and last updated 4:20 PM, Jan 23, 2025
DENVER A former Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) forensic scientist accused of mishandling DNA and impacting more than 1,000 cases has been charged with 102 felonies.
Yvonne "Missy" Woods turned herself into the Jefferson County Jail on Wednesday afternoon and has been charged with 48 counts of attempting to influence a public servant, 52 counts of forgery of a government-issued document, one count of perjury and one count of cybercrime with damage of more than $1 million. The cybercrime charge is a Class 2 felony, while the others are Class 4 and 5 felonies.
The First Judicial District Attorney's Office said the counts are in connection with 58 instances of alleged criminal misconduct between 2008 and 2023. An affidavit for an arrest warrant outlined those 58 criminal cases, which included homicides, sexual assaults (including two a child), arson, child trafficking, robberies, burglaries, missing persons and more in Denver, Wheat Ridge, Englewood, Lakewood, Jefferson County, Black Hawk, Boulder, Boulder County, Loveland, Lafayette, Arapahoe County, Adams County, Broomfield, Arvada, Aurora, Longmont, Fraser/Winter Park, Westminster, Thornton, Larimer County, Greeley, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Fremont County and El Paso County.
Her cash-only bond was set at $50,000. Woods is expected in court on Thursday.
{snip}
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Colorado crime lab analyst altered DNA evidence in hundreds of cases, prosecutors say (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Friday
OP
DNA tests should be confirmed under double-blind restrictions before they can be used as evidence.
Midnight Writer
Friday
#3
Response to mahatmakanejeeves (Original post)
wolfie001 This message was self-deleted by its author.
mwmisses4289
(291 posts)2. Wow.
SMH. What a headache this person has caused Colorado's legal system.
Midnight Writer
(23,337 posts)3. DNA tests should be confirmed under double-blind restrictions before they can be used as evidence.