Pubdate: Sun, 08 Apr 2001 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2001 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Steve Visser, Joshua Good contributed to this article. FOR DRUG DEALERS, PLEADING CASE IN COURT IS NOT OFTEN A HARD SELL Sherry Lyons-Williams loved busting drug dealers who fuel burglaries, robberies and murders and leave behind broken lives and lost souls. But the fact is the dealer the Atlanta detective died trying to arrest Wednesday would have been back on the street within weeks, if not days, to ply his trade again. "Most of them know the system and most of them balk at jail time," said Fulton County Assistant District Attorney Robert McBurney, who used to prosecute dealers. "They say, 'I'll be a laughingstock. Nobody does time for this.' " McBurney voices the frustration of prosecutors and police. It's no secret that Fulton courts are so overloaded with drug cases and other crimes that drug dealers routinely get probation on the first conviction and sometimes for several. "We don't try them --- they plead or the state drops the charges," said chief Fulton Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Long, who noted dealers awaiting trial are ideal candidates for bail. "They really don't have any reason to run." Michael Thompson, who was killed after shooting Lyons-Williams, was a prime candidate for probation. Police found a small amount of cocaine in the house on Lakewood Terrace --- 58 hits of crack and some powder. "He'd never been arrested before," said Atlanta police Detective Dick Rose. "He was probably facing six months probation." Most dealers don't carry enough drugs to face a drug-trafficking charge, which has a tougher penalty, and judges and prosecutors focus on murder, robbery and rape when setting cases for trial. Fulton District Attorney Paul Howard noted his office received 18,000 cases last year and nearly half of them were drug crimes --- excluding drug-related crimes. Even if the 17 Superior Court judges tried a case a week, they would barely cut into the backlog of violent felonies, which means dope peddlers are free on bond and can wait for any plea bargain they like. "When a system is as overcrowded as the Fulton system is, defendants control the plea negotiations," said Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter. "They dictate what they'll take." Districts with smaller caseloads can dole out tougher punishments, which in effect raise the state average sentence for sale or distribution of cocaine to 5.7 years, Porter said. But even that average is a mirage because it doesn't account for parole. Most imprisoned dealers become eligible for release after a third of their sentence and the prisons need to make space for new inmates. If courts routinely free dealers --- at least until they kill somebody - --- why send officers crashing through doors? Atlanta City Councilman C.T. Martin, who wants a review of search techniques, has asked Police Chief Beverly Harvard to find ways to keep officers safer after Lyons-Williams was killed and her 35-year-old partner, Thaddeus Chambers, was wounded. "I don't know if it's fair to ask a police officer to go out and make cases that aren't going to be prosecuted," Porter said. "But the alternative is to ask them not to enforce the law and I'm not sure that is viable." Atlanta Police Deputy Chief C.B. Jackson said the department is already reviewing the raid, as it always does in a police shooting, and it will likely complete it after the 39-year-old Lyons-Williams' funeral on Tuesday. Jackson said narcotics officers would continue the raids. Dealers need to be arrested; crack houses need to be shut down; neighborhoods need to be made safe --- or at least a little safer. "This is something police departments do 24-7, 365 days a year," Jackson said. But others --- from constitutional scholars to some law officers --- have questioned the wisdom of many of the raids in which police typically kick the door immediately after announcing themselves. It creates a chaotic, adrenaline-packed environment that puts officers at risk and also sometimes people who aren't the target of arrest. Wednesday's shootout happened in a boardinghouse where people rented rooms. Police say the raids stop dealers from destroying the drugs --- the evidence. But both defense lawyers and prosecutors say searches seldom yield enough narcotics to translate into a 10-year trafficking sentence. "Obviously, if they get caught with less quantity, they're better off, but you have to look at what you would expect to find anyway," said Steve Sadow, a criminal defense lawyer. Long, the judge, said statistics depict the "drug war" as futile but society demands enforcement of drug laws. "The people who live in these neighborhoods who are not users and dealers really want these people out of there," she said. "They have 5-year-olds who can't go out and play." But Sadow disagreed: "Numbers are the way law-enforcement agencies justify their own existence ... and it puts officers --- people on the front line --- at risk because statistics are what their agencies are looking for." Regardless, right now the system that lets drug dealers escape prison causes the neighborhoods to lose faith in it and undermines quality of life, said Howard, the Fulton DA. Restoring respect requires a more effective system, which may mean bringing fewer but better cases, hiring more police to patrol streets and building more treatment and educational centers to tackle a problem that is as much medical and cultural as criminal, he said. So far nobody has found the answer. "Your punishment aspect has got to get a lot better but that alone is not going to solve the drug problem in Fulton County," Howard said. "The coming mayoral election ought to be a debate about who is going to improve the criminal justice system." Sherry Lyons-Williams tried. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk