http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080414/METRO/804140439/1409/METRO
DETROIT -- A federal judge expressed annoyance Monday when a city attorney said Detroit government no longer has records showing which employees were using which city pagers at the time an exotic dancer was shot to death in 2003.
As part of a federal lawsuit, lawyers for the son of Tamara "Strawberry" Greene are seeking text messages that employees sent and received on city-issued SkyTel pagers.
But Krystal Crittendon, a lawyer for the city, said records showing which employees carried which pagers
were shredded after the city stopped using the devices in 2004.
How very-very convenient.
Rosen also ordered the city to turn over Greene's homicide file to him for private review by Friday.
And he told the city that if he doesn't receive information about which employees carried which pagers, he will have no choice but to tell SkyTel to turn over all the text messages for all city employees. "We're going to get to the bottom of this," he said.
Norman Yatooma, Flagg's lawyer, asked Rosen Thursday to order the city to show why it should not be sanctioned or found in contempt of court. The city has failed to turn over Greene's homicide file and records that will help locate text messages from city-issued SkyTel pagers that might be relevant to the case, Yatooma argued in a court filing.