Instead of cutting off or removing the bracelet, however, which would have alerted authorities, police said Quincy Green found a new way to dupe the tracker - he took off his leg.
A review is underway at the Districts Pre-Trial Services agency after a GPS monitoring device was incorrectly placed on a mans prosthetic leg.
That man, 34-year-old Quincy Green, took off his leg and committed a murder.
Dana Hamilton was shot to death on Southern Avenue last month and police had no suspects for six days until someone dropped a dime on Green. He was fitted with the GPS device after he had been arrested for carrying a pistol without a license.
After receiving the tip on Green, police checked camera footage from the surrounding area and according to a nine page affidavit the gunman was spotted, with an obvious limp.
Authorities filed a search warrant and inside Greens residence officials recovered a box from the living room, inside the box was a prosthetic leg with a GPS tracking device. A device record showed that it had barely moved in a 72 hour period.
Very simply it was human error, said Cliff Keenan, the Director of the Pre-trial Services Agency for the District of Columbia.
This agency monitors defendants facing charges in court.
"The contract through which we have contracted for services includes putting onto the individual defendants the actual GPS bracelet and one would assume that the person doing the installation would know not to put it on to a prosthetic device, we don't know what the company has been able to find out about how this happened under these particular circumstances other than it was a violation of protocols," said Keenan.
The district did away with cash bond years ago and instead defendants are released on their own recognizance or fitted with one of the GPS tracking devices from Sentinel Services of California.