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17 Facts About Annie Dookhan

1.

Annie Dookhan was born on 1977 and is an American chemist who was convicted of felony obstruction of justice, tampering with evidence, and other crimes relating to mass falsification of lab results.

2.

Annie Dookhan was born Annie Sadiyya Khan into an Indo-Trinidadian family in San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago in 1977.

3.

Annie Dookhan moved to the United States when she was a child and eventually became a citizen.

4.

In 2010, a coworker found that Annie Dookhan was claiming on her resume that she had earned a master's degree from the University of Massachusetts.

5.

In 2003, Annie Dookhan was hired as a chemist at the Hinton State Laboratory Institute in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston.

6.

In June 2011, an evidence officer at the lab discovered that Annie Dookhan had tested 95 samples without properly signing them out.

7.

However, she was still allowed to continue testifying in court until February 2012, when district attorneys throughout the Boston area were notified of the breach in protocol and Annie Dookhan was placed on administrative leave.

8.

The probe revealed that Annie Dookhan's superiors had ignored red flags surrounding her before 2011.

9.

Annie Dookhan even went as far as to add cocaine to samples in which no cocaine was present.

10.

Annie Dookhan said she had been dry-labbing for as long as three years.

11.

On September 28,2012, Annie Dookhan was arrested and charged with obstruction of justice and falsification of academic records.

12.

However, school officials revealed that Annie Dookhan had no such degree, and had never taken master's level classes there.

13.

Annie Dookhan was charged with falsely certifying results that she knew to be compromised; these certifications were admitted as evidence in court.

14.

On November 22,2013, Dookhan was sentenced to three to five years of imprisonment and two years of probation by Judge Carol S Ball in Suffolk Superior Court, after pleading guilty to crimes relating to falsifying drug tests.

15.

Annie Dookhan created, and the integrity of the criminal justice system has been shaken to the core.

16.

In May 2015, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that defendants whose convictions on drug charges were based on evidence potentially tainted by Annie Dookhan could pursue retrials without having to face more charges or tougher sentences.

17.

Annie Dookhan's story was the subject of a Netflix series, How to Fix a Drug Scandal created by Erin Lee Carr that was released April 1,2020.