Pubdate: Mon, 17 Jan 2000 Source: Home News Tribune (NJ) Copyright: 2000 Home News Tribune Contact: 35 Kennedy Blvd. East Brunswick, NJ 08816 Website: http://www.thnt.com/hnt/ Author: David Jefferson Harris Jr. CASE TESTS THE 'STRONG BLUE LINE' In an ironic chain of events, admitted drug-dealer Corey Ashford has become the star witness for both the prosecution and the defense in the celebrated New Brunswick police-corruption case. Ashford's recorded conversations with former Hub City detective James Marshall became the centerpiece in the 1998 grand jury investigation that resulted in Marshall's indictment for dealing drugs and accepting bribes. Bolstered by astute legal counsel and his former colleagues from the New Brunswick Police Department, Marshall is winning the battle for the hearts and minds of potential jurors who will decide his fate on charges, which also include operating three brothels. During the 1998 state police investigation that ensnared Marshall, Ashford agreed to wear a recording device. Since then he has lived under the microscopic view of the New Brunswick Police Department. As a result, Ashford has been arrested on a variety of drug charges. The campaign to destroy Ashford's credibility is a case study on the inner workings of the "Strong Blue Line." When the members conclude an outsider has placed "one of their own" at risk of public humiliation, the rule of law takes a back seat to the perceived need to circle the wagons. In other drug activity, the police have not applied an equivalent level of commitment and determination they displayed against Ashford. If they had, the problem of street-level drug-dealing would be nonexistent in the city. However, in the final analysis, the motives of the arresting officers cannot be challenged. Each time the cops ran down Ashford, he was in places he should have avoided and conducting the same business that caused him to be arrested more than 12 times since 1998. The selective prosecution argument fails because of Ashford's inability to discipline himself sufficiently to finish the job he started when he volunteered to assist in making the case against Marshall. Ashford has appeared to labor under the false notion he could act with impunity as a central figure in an investigation that ended the career of a street-wise detective with a penchant for making friends in high places. Did Ashford believe Marshall would not try to save himself by calling in any and all outstanding debts? Did he believe the state police and the Middlesex County prosecutor would protect him from Marshall's broad network of friends in law enforcement and the judiciary? Fortunately, in the matter of the State vs. James Marshall, Middlesex Prosecutor Glenn Berman did not ask the grand jury to indict Marshall solely on his recorded conversations with Ashford. As a former Superior Court judge, Berman knows Middlesex County juries are reluctant to convict police officers. But the fact that Berman asked for and received a multiple-count indictment against Marshall means he is confident an impartial jury will also convict him. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tia Swanson is on leave. David Jefferson Harris Jr. lives in New Brunswick. His column appears each Monday. Send e-mail on the Internet. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto