A former Baltimore homicide prosecutor will spend two years in federal prison for illegally issuing subpoenas in order to surveil and stalk former romantic partners, a federal judge ruled on April 18. The sentence is above federal sentencing guidelines for Adam L. Chaudry, 43, who pleaded guilty in December to two felony counts of fraud in connection
A former Baltimore homicide prosecutor will spend time in federal prison for illegally issuing subpoenas in order to surveil and stalk former romantic partners.
A former Baltimore homicide prosecutor will spend two years in federal prison for illegally issuing subpoenas in order to surveil and stalk former romantic partners, a federal judge ruled on April 18.
A former Baltimore prosecutor who used his position to stalk and harass former romantic partners should serve two years in prison, federal prosecutors argued.
A former Baltimore homicide prosecutor who was accused of misusing subpoenas to monitor and stalk romantic partners entered a guilty plea Friday in federal court. Adam L. Chaudry, 43, pleaded guilty to two felony counts of fraud in connection with obtaining confidential phone records. He faces a maximum of 15 years in federal prison at .