Pubdate: Thu, 08 Feb 2001 Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX) Copyright: 2001 Austin American-Statesman Contact: P. O. Box 670 Austin, Texas 78767 Fax: 512-445-3679 Website: http://www.austin360.com/statesman/editions/today/ Author: Jonathan Osborne Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) U.S. ATTORNEY ENDS POLICE INQUIRY Federal officials said Wednesday that they have no plans to look any further into reports from a mid-1990s investigation saying Austin police officers conspired with drug traffickers and took drugs while on duty. "Unless new information comes to light, this is it," U.S. attorney spokesman Daryl Fields said. In a prepared statement, U.S. Attorney Bill Blagg said that if there had been enough evidence to indict and convict any of the officers named during the investigation -- code-named "Mala Sangre," or Bad Blood -- his office would have done so. Blagg's comments come after a weeklong review of documents from Mala Sangre. "No officer of the Austin Police Department was ever called before the federal grand jury, charged or indicted in connection with the investigation," Blagg said. "Had there been credible, admissible evidence that any officer had committed a federal criminal offense, charges would have been pursued at the time." APD Assistant Chief Mike McDonald said the department maintained contact with the U.S. attorney's office during the investigation and that Blagg's statement was what they expected. "They've told us all along that if they felt anything was there, they would have looked into it," McDonald said. The Mala Sangre task force was led by the Internal Revenue Service and included Austin police officers, who helped perform surveillance and other investigative tasks. The investigation centered on Austin-based drug dealer Roger Lopez, who was convicted of drug trafficking in 1998 and sentenced to seven years in prison. The investigation broadened to include police officers after confidential informants reported that officers were using drugs and that at least two officers were aiding Lopez. Lead investigators had claimed that the Austin Police Department cut the inquiry short by transferring officers to other duties. In addition, three officers filed a whistle-blower lawsuit against the City of Austin, claiming that they were transferred to halt the investigation into police misconduct. Mala Sangre's lead investigators IRS agent Wayne Young and Austin officer Stan Farris wrote a "summary of allegations" and a chronology listing possible police misconduct that couldn't be fully investigated without police support. Those reports were filed in a separate whistleblower lawsuit against the city, which Capt. Cecil Huff settled last month for $6,000. The department has denied that officers were transferred to curtail the investigation. "If officers are suspected of wrongdoing in a local jurisdiction, a local jurisdiction cannot shut down a federal investigation," McDonald said. Should further information surface, "We won't hesitate to investigate," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: GD