Pubdate: Sat, 07 Apr 2001 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2001 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Kate Hunger, Express-News Staff Writer Note: Staff Writer Amy Dorsett contributed to this report. Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n580/a02.html DA DUMPS 33 CASES BECAUSE OF COPS' BUST Bexar County District Attorney Susan Reed dismissed 33 cases Friday she said couldn't be prosecuted without the testimony of four officers busted in last month's FBI sting. All but one of the cases involved drugs, and 30 were handled by Bexar County sheriff's Deputy Richard Rowlett Buchanan. Assigned to the narcotics division last June, Buchanan worked as an evidence technician and was responsible for transporting drug evidence for measurement and analysis. Buchanan was a key witness in so many dismissed cases because they hinged on evidence that bore only his initials, First Assistant District Attorney Michael Bernard said. One of the cases lost Friday because of Buchanan's involvement was a January traffic stop on Interstate 35 that yielded 44 pounds of marijuana and two felony arrests. "You don't like to have to do it, and it's a sad day when we have to do something like that," Reed said. "It's important to me that when we proceed on cases, we do it in good faith ... and I didn't want to put these guys on the stand and vouch for them." The other three dismissed cases were handled, one each, by San Antonio Police Officers Lawrence Bustos, Arthur Gutierrez Jr. and David Anthony Morales, according to a news release from Reed's office. Buchanan, Bustos, Gutierrez and Morales were four in a group of 12 people, most of them law officers, arrested in an FBI police corruption sting two weeks ago. Buchanan is the only defendant in the sting facing just a theft charge. Charges against the other defendants include conspiracy, attempted possession and distribution of cocaine and firearms violations. Their arrests stemmed from an investigation begun in 1997 in which undercover agents posed as drug traffickers. Jim Kopp, chief of the intake section in the DA's office, signed the papers to dismiss the cases. He said between four and six people were in jail last week in connection with the cases set for dismissal; others were out on bond. He declined Friday to reveal how many inmates — if any — would be released from jail because of Friday's dismissals. Attempts to get that information from Bexar County Jail were unsuccessful Friday. All but two of the dismissals were felony drug cases. The remaining two cases involved evading detention with a vehicle and possession of marijuana up to 2 ounces, both misdemeanors, according to court records. Nine of the dismissals are cases filed by law enforcement agencies that did not include an arrest, Kopp said. The other 24 cases had been accepted by the DA's office earlier and involved arrests but no indictments, he said. Sheriff's Deputy Chief Ruben Garcia didn't dispute the number of cases tied to Buchanan and said it's possible that every case the deputy handled while assigned to narcotics had been dismissed. He speculated that Buchanan's number of dropped cases would have been much lower if he had been assigned to a division less "sensitive" than narcotics. "Just the image of something being wrong, especially with this going on, is going to raise a red flag," Garcia said. "It's unfortunate that these cases are being dismissed," he said. "What if the case against Buchanan is dismissed? Are they going to go and rearrest these people?" That's a question that had no immediate answer. Stemming from the federal investigation, SAPD Sgt. Conrad Fragozo Jr. and officers Patrick Bowron, Morales, Peter Saenz, Gutierrez, Bustos and Manuel Cedillo Jr. were charged with attempting to possess and distribute cocaine. Officer Alfred Valdes was charged with aiding the attempted possession and distribution of cocaine. Also on Friday, the DA dropped three cases handled by Balcones Heights Police Officer John Beauford, a former supervisor with the Alamo Area Narcotics Task Force, who was indicted in March on federal charges of possession of cocaine, crack and stolen firearms in a case unrelated to the FBI sting. All the cases were scrubbed for practical reasons, Bernard said. "We don't yet know whether we can vouch for these witnesses or not," Bernard said. "As a practical matter, frankly, they are unavailable witnesses. Their lawyers will not let them take the witness stand." Reed and Bernard have said their concern was finding pending cases that could have been compromised. Their review went back two years and included 3,000 police reports from the San Antonio Police Department and an internal review of cases in which Buchanan was a key witness. They did not try to find cases that already have ended in convictions. Word of the dismissals set off much speculation about how many convicts will be able to appeal their cases in the wake of the FBI sting. St. Mary's University School of Law Professor Gerald Reamey drew a distinction between the crimes alleged against the San Antonio officers and the corruption scandal in the Los Angeles Police Department Rampart division last year. Officers there were accused of lying under oath and planting evidence. Those convictions led to hundreds of dismissals and overturned convictions. Those aren't the same kinds of accusations being made in the San Antonio case. "But there certainly is a cloud over a conviction where the case is based on an officer's testimony and that officer's credibility is in doubt," Reamey said. "It's not a good foundation on which to build a strong case." Staff Writer Amy Dorsett contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D