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Linskey sworn in as acting Monmouth County prosecutor
Linskey sworn in as acting Monmouth County prosecutor
Lori Linskey has been sworn in as acting Monmouth County prosecutor, the first woman to hold that title in the history of the office.
Linskey, 57, of Wall Township, was sworn in before state Superior Court Assignment Judge Lisa P. Thornton, sitting in Freehold, in a ceremony on June 2, according to a press release from the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office.
The oath was administered after Gov. Phil Murphy selected Linskey to become acting prosecutor. Linskey succeeds Christopher J. Gramiccioni, who resigned earlier this month after nearly a decade as prosecutor.
Public defender, N.J. county sparring over ability to hold on to 911 call evidence
Updated 11:00 AM;
The state public defender’s office is appealing a recent court ruling dismissing its lawsuit over how a South Jersey county retains data potentially relevant in criminal cases.
The Office of the Public Defender sued Gloucester County last year over issues involving a damaged server used to store 911 calls, police dispatch communications and other data, and a policy change that would reduce how long such data is preserved on a new county server.
The public defender argues that material relevant to criminal cases is being lost, while the county says the plaintiff has not identified any instances of harm caused by the county’s policies, which it says are in line with state rules.
N.J. public defender sues this county over how it keeps 911 calls, dispatch recordings
Updated Dec 24, 2020;
The state public defender’s office is suing Gloucester County over recent changes to its record retention practices for potential evidence in criminal cases.
The issue involves storage of 911 calls, radio communications, dispatch records and any other data maintained by the county that could be used as evidence.
While this information has previously been stored for years, the public defender’s office learned earlier this year that old files would soon be destroyed because of a server malfunction and that new ones would only be maintained for 31 days, according to the suit, creating problems for current and future clients represented by the public defender.