BOSTON — A judge on Massachusetts’ highest court has ordered the dismissal of thousands more cases tainted by a former chemist who authorities say was high almost every day she worked at a state drug lab for eight years.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts and the state’s public defender agency say more than 11,000 convictions in nearly 7,700 cases are being tossed.
Prosecutors agreed to dismiss the cases tainted by Sonja Farak, of Northampton, who pleaded guilty in 2014 to stealing drugs from the Department of Public Health lab in Amherst.
Prosecutors already have agreed to dismiss about 8,000 convictions tainted by Farak. Of those cases, 1,497 convictions were dismissed in November by the Northwestern district attorney’s office.
The cases represent drug convictions between 2004 and 2012 that were based on certificates of analysis signed by Farak. Around the same time, the Hampden district attorney’s office also said it would dismiss about 3,940 district and juvenile convictions involving drug samples tied to Farak.
The ACLU and Committee for Public Counsel Services also are asking the court to consider whether all cases that passed through the drug lab during Farak’s employment should be re-examined, even if she didn’t work on them.
The court is scheduled to hear the motion in May.
The drug lab in Amherst handled samples primarily from western Massachusetts police departments but also tested samples that had been diverted from the Hinton/Jamaica Plain lab in an effort to decrease a backlog. The Amherst lab was shuttered in 2013 after news broke of Farak’s drug thefts.
Farak’s case is separate from another Massachusetts drug lab scandal that resulted in an unprecedented dismissal of roughly 21,000 convictions last year. Those cases were tainted by Annie Dookhan, a drug chemist for the state lab in Jamaica Plain who was arrested in 2012 and convicted of tampering with evidence. Dookhan had been found to be “dry-labbing,” or identifying samples by sight without actually testing them to boost her work production and impress her superiors.
The handling of the Farak investigation drew ire from at least one superior court judge who blasted not only Farak but also the Massachusetts attorney general’s office. In a 127-page ruling issued last summer, Judge Richard Carey said one former assistant attorney general intentionally misrepresented facts and deliberately misled defense lawyers, prosecutors and the court. Another assistant attorney general, the judge said, “lacked a moral compass.” He wrote that the two prosecutors committed a “fraud upon the court.”
