Pubdate: Mon, 03 Apr 2000 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2000 The Denver Post Contact: 1560 Broadway, Denver, CO 80202 Fax: (303) 820.1502 Website: http://www.denverpost.com/ Forum: http://www.denverpost.com/voice/voice.htm EDITORIAL: TRAVESTY OF JUSTICE April 3 - In an appalling miscarriage of justice, three men have been held in federal prison for five months after wiretap evidence against them was disallowed. In all, these men have been in prison since they were arrested in December 1998. These suspects and six others were accused of selling cocaine in a case in which the FBI used wiretaps illegally. Some of the six pleaded guilty; some were released on bond. But people's telephones cannot be tapped until agents exhaust all other means of investigation: talking to the suspect while wearing a recording device, tailing the person, talking to the suspect's friends and associates, conducting surveillance and even examining the suspect's trash. The FBI used none of those tactics, however, before commencing use of a wiretap. That fact alone was sufficient for U.S. District Judge Walker Miller to disallow all the wiretap evidence last November. The wiretap, the most intrusive of all investigative tools, constituted almost all the evidence in this case. Yet the U.S. Attorney's Office appealed that ruling - and refused to let the three men go free on bond, despite the fact that almost all evidence against them had been suppressed. So Joe Willie Hightower, Clifford Arrington and Lorenzo Martinez were left in their federal prison cells in Englewood. The prosecutors lost their appeal Tuesday, when a three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld Miller's decision supressing the wiretap. And Friday, finally, Hightower was released. Martinez should be freed today or tomorrow, his attorney says. Arrington won't be let go, however, because he faces other charges of cocaine distribution. The U.S. Attorney's Office may ask the full circuit court to review the case. We would hope not. We would hope these prosecutors have gotten the message by now. And we would hope that they never again keep people imprisoned after the prosecutorial evidence is supressed. It is frightening that the FBI would conduct such a slipshod investigation. And it is a travesty that the U.S. Attorney's Office would leave men in prison for months after their case has been gutted. We expect better of federal law officers.