Read about it here in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons. Here is a taste:
Dr. Becker then filed a motion to suppress the evidence with the Third District Court in Utah. Subsequent to this filing, the stateprosecutor dismissed the case with prejudice, ending this part of thesaga. His reasons, explained under oath in deposition, were:
As I carefully analyzed that, I had to scrutinize whether
we could win that motion hearing, whether we could
persuade the judge that these things that hadn’t been
documented [by the State of Utah] were innocent, were not
that severe. And, frankly, I also carefully thought about the
pressure—not pressure, that’s the wrong word—the
political damage that would do to the Attorney General’s
office. Because I thought at best this team is going to look
like we were clumsy, we have done sloppy work. But at
worst it’s going to look like we have deliberately tried to
hide things.