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A judge ruled this week that a federal lawsuit against eCourts, the state’s $100 million digital records system, can go forward.
And some defense attorneys struggling with the system in Wake, one of the four pilot counties where the eCourts case management system rolled out in mid-February, say its disruptions and slowdowns ...
A lawsuit alleges the state’s software caused people to be arrested multiple times on the same warrant, and led to undue jail ...
As North Carolina courts prepare to expand eCourts, intended to be a “virtual ... lagging performance — the time it takes to pull up case information in the middle of a hearing, for example ...
DMV regularly receives case data from all 100 courthouses that ... but does not change his agency’s stance on the status of eCourts. With Mecklenburg’s addition to the system just days away ...
As North Carolina courts prepare to expand eCourts, intended to be a “virtual ... refer to specific issues identified with a particular case event or action producing an unanticipated result ...
United States District Court Judge William Osteen’s ruling could reveal more about eCourts, software that plaintiffs allege led to extra jail time and multiple arrests on the same warrant.
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