Pubdate: Tue, 09 May 2000 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2000 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Forum: http://www.freep.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: L. L. Brasier DRUG CONVICTION OVERTURNED Prosecutors falsely withheld data in 1999 Puertas case, judge rules A judge threw out the 1999 drug conviction of a Clarkston businessman Monday, saying prosecutors improperly withheld information from defense attorneys that showed their case had serious flaws. Joseph Puertas, 73, will get a new trial because prosecutors violated his constitutional rights when they withheld a police report that showed investigators had doubts about the evidence against him, Oakland County Circuit Judge Colleen O'Brien ruled. O'Brien also threw out the conviction of codefendant James Talley. Had defense attorneys known about the report, the outcome of the trial might have been different, O'Brien noted. Puertas' attorney, Robyn Frankel, called the judge's decision "courageous." "If defense attorneys had known about that report before trial, it would have changed the entire face of the case, because it sheds incredible doubt on the nature of the criminal investigation," Frankel said. "It doesn't just establish reasonable doubt, it establishes huge doubt about my client's guilt." Prosecutors said they would ask the judge to reconsider her decision, and if that failed, they'd go to a higher court. "It should not be forgotten that a unanimous jury found both defendants guilty," said Chief Assistant Prosecutor John O'Brien. "However, in the event we are required to re-litigate the case, we are confident we can convict Puertas again." In November, a jury convicted Puertas and Talley of drug trafficking. The case against Puertas was based largely on a single informant, Joseph Sweeney, a cocaine addict who testified he bought drugs from Puertas on six occasions in late 1997 at a bowling alley owned by the Puertas family in Orion Township. But no drugs were found during raids on Puertas' home, his family's homes, businesses and the bowling alley. However, police discovered more than $1 million in cash in the family's safes. They hope to keep that money, plus another $3 million in family assets, under the state's drug forfeiture laws. One undercover officer later admitted he falsified a report saying he was on surveillance when he wasn't on duty. And no one saw drugs exchange hands between Puertas and Sweeney, nor does a drug deal show up on surveillance tapes made by police. An internal investigation by the State Police on how the drug officers handled the case showed the key drug investigator, Kenneth Quisenberry, went to his superiors before trial and urged they try to avoid a trial because "some of the information within the investigation was not really the way things were observed." And the head of the Sheriff's Department Narcotics Enforcement Team, Mark Menghini, told the State Police he thought Quisenberry had conducted a sloppy investigation and that Sweeney "was not very good." The drug purchases, Menghini said, were conducted by Sweeney with "no undercover involvement." Jurors never heard about the State Police report, although prosecutors were aware of the findings. Puertas has been free on bond since February, after the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled he should remain free while appealing his conviction. The Michigan Supreme Court ruled twice that he should be returned to prison, but a federal judge continued his bond. The overturning of Puertas' conviction makes it more likely he will remain free pending a new trial. A separate civil trial, to determine if police and prosecutors can keep the seized assets as drug proceeds, is set for July. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg