Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jul 2001 Source: Herald, The (WA) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/190 Author: Scott North, Herald Writer Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n236/a07.html http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n187/a09.html CRIME CHEMIST PLEADS GUILTY Mike Hoover knew he was doing was wrong. The longtime forensic chemist knew he was risking his career and reputation and freedom when he began sniffing small amounts of purified heroin dust he had cooked up from evidence sent for testing at the Washington State Patrol crime lab in Marysville. He knew it was wrong, but the drug gave him relief from chronic back pain. The 51-year-old Edmonds man kept using it for months, until he was finally caught in December. On Tuesday, Hoover appeared in Snohomish County Superior Court and pleaded guilty to tampering with physical evidence and official misconduct, both gross misdemeanors. He could face up to two years behind bars, although prosecutors are recommending he serve about half that much time, perhaps in work release. "I wanted to spare my family the cost and the stress of going through a trial," Hoover said of his decision to plead guilty. Besides, he knows he broke the law, and "there is no way I want to try and get out of this." Hoover had worked as a crime lab chemist for 25 years, first in California and for the last 11 years in Washington, primarily at the Marysville crime lab. Patrol detectives began investigating after co-workers became concerned about Hoover's insistence on handling heroin cases. A hidden camera near Hoover's work area documented him repeatedly taking heroin from evidence that had been sent to the crime lab. When confronted with the tapes Dec. 22, Hoover told detectives he hadn't intended to begin using heroin, but accidentally sniffed concentrated, crystalline dust left over from an evidence test. He said there was immediate relief from his back pain, and he regularly began sniffing small amounts of heroin that he'd purified in the laboratory, according to court papers. Hoover on Tuesday said he was careful to limit his drug use to small amounts because he didn't want to get addicted "or strung out. I know about that. That's my job." But his drug use ended his career. Hoover hasn't worked for the crime lab since December, and he formally resigned in March. He hopes to have a new job lined up before his sentencing, which is now scheduled for Sept. 13. Hoover's plea agreement includes a recommendation from prosecutors that he serve a year in jail, in work release if corrections officials agree. That would be followed by two years of community supervision. Hoover would face an additional year in jail if it is found that he engaged in other illegal conduct. Hoover's misconduct has sent ripples through the criminal courts in seven Western Washington counties, where questions have surfaced over the reliability of evidence he handled. In Snohomish County alone, up to 200 felony charges could be dismissed, according to prosecutors. Hoover said he was shocked to hear of that fallout, and said he stands by the quality of the tests he did on evidence, despite his pilfering of drugs. "I knew it was wrong, but I didn't think it was hurting anybody," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe