Pubdate: Sat, 22 Apr 2000 Source: Oklahoman, The (OK) Copyright: 2000 The Oklahoma Publishing Co. Contact: P.O. Box 25125, Oklahoma City, OK 73125 Feedback: http://www.oklahoman.com/?ed-writeus Website: http://www.oklahoman.com/ Forum: http://www.oklahoman.com/forums/ Author: Michael McNutt ENID COUPLE SUE UPS OVER SEARCH OF HOME ENID -- Instead of delivering their packages, United Parcel Service Inc. set in motion a series of events that sent police to Quynh and Hoa Ninh's house, the couple said in a lawsuit filed Friday in Garfield County. Two packages contained Vietnamese tea that the couple wanted sent to relatives in California, said William Maxwell, an Enid lawyer representing the Ninhs. UPS is accused of opening the packages without the couple's permission, then calling and telling Enid police that the contents possibly were drugs, Maxwell said. The freight carrier also is being sued for failing to deliver the packages. An armed tactical police team went to the couple's house and searched for two hours, Maxwell said. The search turned up no illegal drugs, he said. No one was arrested. Quynh Ninh, 61, and his new wife, Hoa, 25, were terrified by the police search, Maxwell said. Hoa Ninh had been in the United States for 10 days when the police search occurred, he said. The Ninhs filed four complaints against UPS and seek at least $40,000 in damages. A UPS representative failed to return phone calls Friday. The Ninhs took the sealed packages last June to the UPS shipping office in Enid. The tea apparently looked the same as marijuana leaves, and UPS contacted Enid police, Maxwell said. Drug dogs reacted to the packages, and a field drug test done on the contents determined a positive test for marijuana, he said. Maxwell said basic field tests often mistake tea for marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake