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In the end, Kramer refused to allow Six4Three to retrieve
In the end, Kramer refused to allow Six4Three to retrieve his devices from Kramer, saying that the company had not had enough time to comply with their demands. He also said that Kramer has no legal right to do that and that there was no evidence of him making any threats to the San Mateo County Sheriff's Office.
"The prosecutor has decided to make a decision about the evidence in this case," South Bay District Attorney John L. Sánchez told Ars. "It is not clear to me that he would have done so in a criminal case without any evidence that would have corroborated his claims of being a threat to the Sheriff. I assume that, too, as the person who created, maintains and maintains, or maintains, this website."
The website was taken offline in May 2014, after a group of San Mateo County residents, including members of a religious group, said that the app, which has 1.5 million monthly active users and which was originally posted in 2011, contained graphic depictions of gay men. Sánchez said that Sánchez had been "extremely cooperative" and could not give a reason for the shutdown, but did not specify how long he planned to keep the website. He did not say where he was planning to post the site.
According to the San Mateo County district attorney's office, in the days after the shutdown Sánchez told the San Mateo County Sheriff's Office that he had obtained the documents from Sánchez's office, but that he did not know where they were, including the names of the San Mateo County Sheriff's office and the San Mateo County Sheriff's Office website, which he later deleted.
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