Hinton Lab Operations Part 5

Hinton Lab Operations Part 5

Author: Jamie Folk March 1, 2021 Duration: 1:17:16

After reviewing thousands of documents regarding the investigations Massachusetts did into the state drug labs, perhaps the most disturbing finding is that exactly one person expressed regret that hundreds of thousands of people were denied their right to a fair trial. That one person was Annie Dookhan, the one most responsible for sending innocent people to jail but hardly the only one that could be blamed for it.

In this episode Chris, Jamie and Ilyas review the last of the interviews with the Hinton staff including one with Annie Dookhan herself. The interview that is most telling is perhaps the one that has never been discussed by the media or any investigators, and that was with Norfolk County Prosecutor George Papachristos.

The lack of coverage of the relationships between Dookan and the prosecutors of the cases she worked on remains a disgraceful part of this narrative. Dookhan was romantically obsessed with Papachristos and acted accordingly. She also thought she was doing the right thing by rigging evidence to send people to prison. Why? Because that's what her friends in the prosecutors offices around the state were telling her.


In the fall of 2012, a single arrest of chemist Annie Dookhan began to unravel a system many assumed was infallible. Then, just months later, the discovery of Sonja Farak’s own misconduct confirmed a profound crisis within Massachusetts drug testing labs. The RIGGEDLabs Podcast, hosted by Jamie Folk alongside Ilyas Rona, digs into the complex aftermath of these events, examining how science, chemistry, and government oversight fatally collided. This isn't just a true crime story about individual bad actors; it's a deep forensic audit of institutional failure. Each episode pulls back the curtain on specific facilities like the William H. Hinton, UMass Amherst, and State Police crime labs, revealing the human errors and systemic pressures that compromised tens of thousands of criminal cases. Listeners will hear a methodical exploration of forensic protocols, the chain of custody, and the staggering legal repercussions that continue to ripple through the justice system today. By focusing on the tangible details of lab work and bureaucratic neglect, this podcast constructs a compelling narrative about what happens when the very evidence we trust is fundamentally corrupted. Tune in for a sobering, meticulously researched journey to the heart of a scandal that redefined forensic science in the courtroom.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 57

RIGGEDLabs Podcast
Podcast Episodes
Episode 4:  Commonwealth V. Sutton [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:35:24
In a landmark decision in the ongoing Massachusetts Drug Lab Scandal, Attorney Jim McKenna obtained a internal Inspector General email that undermined the Inspector General's assertion that Annie Dookhan's drug testing n…
Episode 3:  Commonwealth v Torres [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:28:27
We explore guest Chris Post's time working at the public defenders office (CPCS) in Massachusetts. Specifically we discuss Sonja Farak's time at the Hinton Lab where she is suspected of stealing drugs long before she was…
Commonwealth v. Scott [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:26:33
Lawyer Dana Curhan joins the Rigged Podcast to discuss the case that opened the door for all future dismissals of cases based on Annie Dookhan's testing. This also set the precedent of the state lying about Dookhan's rel…
Commonwealth v. Melendez-Diaz Case Profile [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:15:32
The events of the Massachusetts Drug Lab Scandal can be traced back to the outcome of the landmark Melendez Diaz v Massachusetts Supreme Court Case. Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley argued the case for Massa…
Introduction to Rigged:  The Massachusetts Drug Lab Scandal Podcast [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 9:28
The Podcast beings with the following quote from Richard Nixon's Domestic Policy Chief John Ehrlichman:"We knew we couldn't make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate th…