Sunday, February 16, 2020

A FOLLOW-UP PUBLIC-INFORMATION REQUEST TO THE AUSTIN (TX) POLICE DEPARTMENT THAT I POLITELY SUBMITTED ONLINE TODAY AT APD'S OFFICIAL WEBSITE

(I am seeking from the Austin Police Department Public Information Office) a copy of full and complete and final results from any and all of the retroactive forensic DNA-traces processing that was ever at any time conducted for or in regard to APD Case 11-1180447 and for APD Case 11-3550615, respectively, regardless of whether those retroactive-DNA-trace-processing results were then provided to or reviewed by the Austin Police Department Sex Crimes Unit, the Austin Police Department Nuisance Abatement Unit, the Austin Police Department Vice and Human Trafficking Unit, Austin Police Department Chief or Interim Chief Brian Manley, the APD Internal Affairs Division, or any other APD unit or division or individual officer employed with APD, or any other City of Austin official, such as Austin Assistant City Manager Rey Arellano.

EXCLUDED from the scope of this request are any and all DNA-trace results obtained by APD that DID NOT INVOLVE retroactive processing over a multi-day period or multi-week period or multi-month period of DNA forensic-evidence traces that were obtained from the body of myself, criminal-law complainant John Kevin McMillan of Austin, Texas.
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CITY OF AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT'S AUTOMATIC-MESSAGE E-MAIL REPLY TO ME ON THIS MOST RECENT PUBLIC INFORMATION REQUEST FROM MYSELF:

John Kevin McMillan


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Austin Public Records Center
To: mcmillanj@att.net
Sent: Sunday, February 16, 2020, 07:24:05 PM CST
Subject: Public Information Act Request :: R033127-021620





Dear John McMillan:
 
Thank you for your interest in the public records of the Austin Police Department. Your request has been received and is being processed. Your request was received in this office on 2/16/2020 and given the reference number R033127-021620 for tracking purposes.
Please be advised that the Austin Police Department’s Central Records Division receives over 2500 requests for information a month. These requests are processed in the order received, and we strive to respond to each request promptly, as required by law.
Please know that, as a result of the large volume of requests received, the anticipated timeframe for responding to your request is approximately 45-60 business days.
You will be contacted about the availability and/or provided with copies of the records requested. PLEASE NOTE: The Texas Public Information Act does not require a governmental body to create new information, to do legal research, or to answer questions.
You can monitor the progress of your request at the link below and you’ll receive an email when your request has been completed. Again, thank you for using the Austin Public Records Center.
Austin Police Department

To monitor the progress or update this request please log into the Austin Texas Public Records Center.

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