Pubdate: Mon, 22 Jan 2001
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Author: Paul Duggan, Washington Post Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas)

MASSIVE DRUG SWEEP DIVIDES TEXAS TOWN

TULIA, Tex. -- By midday July 23, 1999, this Panhandle prairie town was 
abuzz with news of the biggest drug bust ever here. The jail was packed 
with suspects rounded up that morning after a grand jury indicted 43 men 
and women for allegedly selling small amounts of cocaine to a sheriff's 
deputy in an undercover operation. Most townspeople, though not all, 
applauded the arrests.

"I remember thinking, 'Well, good; it's about time,' " said Debra Earl, 47, 
a school system employee who later served on a jury in one of the cases.

Earl is white, like most of the 5,000 residents of this isolated community, 
an hour's drive south of Amarillo across the lonesome, table-flat crop 
lands of the High Plains.

"Drugs were getting bad," said another white resident, Daryl Tucker, 48, 
who runs a company that builds bowling alleys. "Our town as a whole sort of 
told the sheriff, 'We need to clean up these drugs.' And he's been doing a 
fine job of it, I think."

Black residents, however, had a far different reaction to the 18-month drug 
sting, which is the focus of a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties 
Union of Texas and an FBI investigation ordered by the Justice Department's 
civil rights division.

Of the 43 people arrested, 40 are black -- about 17 percent of Tulia's 
small black population. Nearly every black person in town had a relative or 
friend on the indictment list. The ACLU lawsuit, filed in September, 
alleges that many of the cases were built on "false testimony and 
fabricated evidence." In a formal complaint to the Justice Department last 
fall, which prompted the ongoing FBI probe, the ACLU called the undercover 
operation "an ethnic cleansing of young male blacks from Tulia."

"If you ask me, they just wanted to take whatever was left of the black 
folks in town and run them all out, and they used the law to do it," said 
Cleveland Henderson, 25, who lost his job as a dishwasher after being 
indicted. Like others, Henderson, who is on probation, said that he was 
falsely accused and that he pleaded guilty in a deal with the prosecutor 
because he feared getting a stiff prison term if convicted at a trial.

Only five of the 43 people indicted had prior drug convictions, according 
to court records. Most were charged with multiple counts of selling one to 
four grams of cocaine to the undercover deputy, who alleged in many cases 
that the deals occurred near schools or public parks, increasing the 
potential penalty. The ACLU said there were no surveillance photos, 
independent witnesses or other evidence in the cases -- just the testimony 
of the white deputy, who worked unsupervised on the streets.

Eight men were convicted at trials in Tulia last year by all-white or 
mostly white juries, and given penitentiary terms of 12, 20, 20, 25, 40, 
45, 60 and 99 years, said Jeff Blackburn, an ACLU lawyer. Of those who made 
plea deals to avoid similarly long prison stretches, 14 were locked up. The 
stiffest sentence was eight years.

Whether the sting was a righteous law-and-order victory or a case of racial 
profiling made worse by trumped-up charges, this much is clear: The war on 
drugs here has deepened the social divide between Tulia's largely white 
establishment and the black community, which is mostly poor. And it has 
highlighted their contrary perceptions of law enforcement: One group trusts 
the police; the other doesn't.

"Without a shadow of a doubt, I did not do it," said Lawanda Smith, 25, who 
was a junior college student at the time of her arrest. Although she 
pleaded guilty in exchange for probation, Smith said in an interview: "The 
charges were totally bogus -- and that's the truth from within my heart. To 
be accused of something you know you didn't do is an awful feeling. It's 
just something that I'll never get over."

The ACLU lawsuit alleges false imprisonment and other misdeeds by Swisher 
County Sheriff Larry Stewart, District Attorney Terry D. McEachern and the 
undercover deputy, Thomas Coleman, all of whom are white. Through their 
attorneys, the three men denied the allegations in the lawsuit and the 
Justice Department complaint.

Coleman, who was hired by Stewart to conduct the sting, is now working 
elsewhere in Texas and could not be located for comment. "It's our position 
that none of the prosecutions was racially motivated and all were 
justified," said lawyer Charlotte Bingham, who represents McEachern and 
Stewart. She said her clients would have no comment on the controversy.

It isn't difficult in Tulia to find white residents eager to praise the 
sheriff. Tucker, the bowling alley builder, called Stewart "as fine a 
Christian man as there ever was. He grew up here, and he's a fair guy 
wanting to do his job as best he can."

"I'm in total support of the sheriff," said Richard Chapman, 41, a partner 
in an insurance agency. Like others, he scoffed at the accusation that the 
drug sting was devised with the black community in mind. When the 
undercover deputy began his work, "he just happened to get involved with 
that group, and that's how it played out," Chapman said. "It wasn't a 
racial-profiling deal at all."

The mayor, Boyd Vaughn, 67, agreed and said he wasn't surprised when he 
read the indictment list. "These are people that aren't real energetic, 
don't have jobs, don't work real hard," he said. "You see them hanging 
around all the time." As for the ACLU's charge of "ethnic cleansing," he 
called it "bull," saying, "Black people that I know, I'm still friends with 
them. . . . We've never had racial problems in this community."

Blackburn and other lawyers said some of the suspects acknowledged selling 
cocaine to Coleman, but in much smaller quantities than alleged and at 
times and places different from those sworn to by the deputy. Others who 
were arrested contend they were falsely charged because they are friends or 
relatives of people who met with Coleman.

Chandra White, 22, one of the three white people indicted after the sting, 
is married to a black man, Kareem White, who was sentenced to 60 years.

"I had never, ever, seen this man until I was getting bailed out of jail," 
Chandra White said of the deputy. "My mom was getting me out and she saw 
him standing there, and she said, 'There's the one you sold drugs to.' And 
I said, 'Him?' This man was standing right in front of my face and I didn't 
even know who he was."

The charges against her were dropped, she said, after she produced a time 
card showing she was at work on the day the deputy allegedly bought cocaine 
from her at her home.

In all but a few cases, Coleman alleged that the suspects sold him one to 
four grams of powder cocaine, which is punishable by up to 20 years in 
state prison. But those who acknowledged dealing with Coleman said they 
sold him rocks of crack, a cheaper form of cocaine, weighing less than a 
gram, which carries a jail term of up to 18 months.

"The drugs here were crack and marijuana," said Smith, echoing others in 
Tulia's black community. "I don't even know what powder looks like."

Blackburn and other lawyers noted that a tiny rock of crack can be ground 
up and mixed with baking soda or other cutting agents to produce more than 
a gram of powder. Under Texas law, prison sentences in cocaine cases are 
based on the weight of the product, no matter how diluted it is.

Coleman, now 41, was hired from out of town to conduct the sting, which 
began in January 1998. Before taking the job, he was out of law 
enforcement, working as a welder, according to Blackburn. Coleman's 
experience was limited to stints as a jailer and a deputy in a few Texas 
counties and a two-week training course in undercover work run by the Drug 
Enforcement Administration, Blackburn said.

In 1996, Coleman, who was then a deputy in Cochran County in West Texas, 
quit his job in the middle of a shift and moved away, leaving nearly $7,000 
in debts with local merchants, according to a letter written by the Cochran 
sheriff to the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement, the state agency that 
licenses police officers.

"It is my opinion that an officer should uphold the law," the Cochran 
sheriff wrote in the 1996 letter. "Mr. Coleman should not be in law 
enforcement."

In Tulia, he left some people gratified and others fearful.

"I don't care whether you're white or black or brown or pink or what 
color," Tucker said. "We just don't want drugs in our town. And we're going 
to clean it up no matter what it takes. I don't care whose toes we have to 
step on to get it done."

In the black community, Smith said, old friends who used to socialize 
nightly on corners and around the basketball court at Conner Park seldom 
get together any more.

"We're all felons, so we can't really hang with one another," she said. "We 
have to stay away from each other or else we'll get our probation revoked."
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