Project Baltimore continues to learn more about the 98 text messages deleted from the State Superintendent of Schools' state-issued cell phone. And the discoveries are leading some to say Superintendent Mohammed Choudhury should consider resigning.
“Most people would take a look at this circumstance and say it's a cover-up,” said Adam Andrzejewski, the founder of Openthebooks.com, a non-partisan government watchdog group.
Andrzejewski’s group, last year, filed 50,000 public records requests, across all 50 states, concerning how your tax dollars are spent.
Andrzejewski is a public records expert, but he’s never seen anything like this. Weeks ago, Project Baltimore received a log of 98 text messages, each one deleted, from the taxpayer-funded cell phone of Superintendent Choudhury. And what Project Baltimore just learned about these deleted text messages, Andrzejewski says, is a big problem.... Read More: FOX45