Harold H. Titus Jr.
Harold H. Titus Jr. served as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia following Thomas A. Flannery and, in February 1973, made the decision to upgrade PROMIS to a real-time online system capable of tracking more than 160 variables per case.
Harold H. Titus Jr. served as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia under President Richard Nixon, succeeding Thomas A. Flannery in the position. In February 1973, Titus directed the upgrade of the Prosecutor's Management Information System from its original batch-processing design to a real-time online system capable of handling more than 160 variables per case. This upgrade was funded by the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration and was administered through INSLAW (then operating as the Institute for Law and Social Research under Bill Hamilton), establishing the foundation for what became PROMIS II.1
Sources
- U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary. The INSLAW Affair: Investigative Report. House Report 102-857, 102nd Congress, 2nd Session, September 10, 1992. ↩
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