Prosecutors dropped one of their felony charges against state Rep. on Wednesday, acknowledging that their case against the Austin Democrat has weakened since a grand jury indicted her on that and 12 other felony counts earlier this year.
The AGÕæÈ˰ټÒÀÖ County district attorney’s office wrote Wednesday that evidence they had used â€� gathered from Dukesâ€� cell phone â€� was incorrect. Originally, prosecutors claimed Dukesâ€� cell phone data showed she was out of Austin on a day when she received payment for working at the Capitol. But, according to Wednesday’s filing, a crime analyst from the Department of Public Safety, in at least one instance, mixed up the data she extracted from Dukesâ€� phone, using information from the wrong calendar date.
That means prosecutors will abandon one felony charge alleging Dukes had falsified travel information to collect a state official’s daily pay on a day when she did not work at the Capitol. The AGÕæÈ˰ټÒÀÖ County District Attorney’s office has until Oct. 30 to say whether it will continue to pursue the other 12 felony charges.
“When analyzing the correct data ... [the Department of Public Safety] stated Ms. Dukes� cell phone indicated activity near downtown Austin, Texas, which puts her within range of the Capitol building,� prosecutors wrote.
A lawyer for Dukes praised the decision.
“The prosecution made the right decision by dropping this charge,� Shaun Clarke, the attorney, said in an email. “Now they need to drop the twelve remaining charges.�
______________________________________