Pubdate: Mon, 17 Sep 2001 Source: South Bend Tribune (IN) Copyright: 2001 South Bend Tribune Contact: http://www.southbendtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/621 Author: Nancy J. Sulok Note: Nancy J. Sulok's columns appear on Mondays and Thursdays JUDGE ORDERS ACQUITTAL IN MARIJUANA CASE AGAINST 'HASSLED' MAN A deputy prosecutor failed to convince a judge that Corey Longs had possession of some marijuana that police found near his car May 2. Superior Court Judge Jerome Frese acquitted Longs after a two-hour bench trial on Aug. 22. That means Longs has won the latest round in his ongoing dispute with the South Bend Police Department. Longs, 22, says the South Bend police have singled him out for harassment ever since the city settled his claim over alleged wrongdoing by the police. Without admitting any wrongdoing, the city agreed last year to pay Longs and his girlfriend $9,000 after the couple alleged that police had entered their home illegally Oct. 8, 1998. Ever since then, Longs said, the police won't leave him alone. He said they often follow him around and stop him for traffic violations. They frequently impound his car for minor traffic offenses, causing him to pay towing and impound fees. I have written articles in the past about his hassles with the police. Police say they suspect Longs is a drug dealer and may be involved in other illegal activities, although he has never been convicted of any drug-related charges. Indeed, police never seem to find any drugs on him during numerous traffic stops. His latest trial involved an incident that happened May 2. Cpl. Jennifer Anders testified that she was on her way to another call when she saw Longs sitting in his stopped car on the west side of Johnson Street, just north of Lincoln Way West. That's an area noted for illegal drug trafficking, she said. The officer said a man was standing in the street next to Longs' car, and Longs had something in his hand that she thought might be a baggie of marijuana. As she passed the car, she said, she told the man to get out of the street. Anders said she drove down to the next corner and turned around. By that time the man had walked away and Longs had started to drive away. She made no effort to stop the man who was walking away, but she did stop Longs to investigate her suspicions of drug trafficking. The officer said she didn't find any drugs on Longs or in his car, but she found a small baggie containing a "green leafy substance" along the curb near where his car had been stopped. The substance tested positive for marijuana, according to Cpl. Mark Szweda. Longs testified that the man he had been talking to had been interested in buying his car. He said the item that was in his hand was not a baggie of marijuana but was a napkin on which he had written his phone number to give to the other man. Jeff Kimmell, Longs' attorney, established that the location of the baggie near the curb made it unlikely that it had been dropped or tossed from the driver's side of the car, which was away from the curb. He also argued that no evidence was presented to link the baggie in the street to Longs. Judge Frese said Deputy Prosecutor Rick Metzger failed to elicit testimony that would have connected Longs to the baggie. Indeed, Metzger had neglected to have the baggie of marijuana brought over from the police department's evidence locker, and a police officer was dispatched to transport it to the courthouse. Once the trial was under way, Frese at times had to coach Metzger about what kinds of questions he should be asking. Metzger also was getting advice from a couple of other deputy prosecutors who were in the courtroom with him, one of whom was chided by the judge for appearing in shirtsleeves instead of a coat and tie. Before announcing his verdict, Frese commented that "reasonable doubt is a very strong thing here." Although he found it likely that Longs did have the baggie, the evidence did not prove that beyond a reasonable doubt, Frese said. "He gets the benefit of the doubt," Frese said, ruling for acquittal. Meanwhile, Longs will be back in court next month on two other misdemeanor cases that are pending against him. One involves two counts of driving with a suspended license and one of resisting arrest April 23 at Colfax Avenue and Chapin Street. The other involves two counts of battery of a police officer and one of resisting arrest from an incident April 13. Those trials were supposed to take place Aug. 22 also, but Metzger asked for a continuance because the prosecutor's office had neglected to subpoena some key witnesses. Frese dismissed another case stemming from an alleged resisting arrest incident June 27 in the 400 block of North Olive Street. The prosecutor's office has failed to file the charges in that case.