Pubdate: Tue, 15 May 2001 Source: Waco Tribune-Herald (TX) Copyright: 2001 Waco-Tribune Herald Contact: http://accesswaco.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/485 Author: Tommy Witherspoon OFFICER AT MART TYC FACILITY CONVICTED OF DEALING COCAINE A juvenile correctional officer at the Texas Youth Commission facility in Mart was placed on felony probation Tuesday after his conviction as a cocaine dealer. Judge George Allen of Waco's 54th State District Court placed Patrick Dewayne Jones, 20, of Waco on probation for six years and ordered him to perform 500 hours of community service. Jones, who told the judge that the first-degree felony conviction should have no bearing on his employment status, pleaded guilty March 29 to possession of cocaine with intent to deliver. Jones started working as a juvenile correctional officer at the McLennan County State Juvenile Correctional Facility in Mart three days after he pleaded guilty to the drug charges, said John Hopkins, the TYC facility's superintendent. Hopkins said Jones applied for a job at the facility in January, stating on his application that he had not been convicted of a crime. The application does not ask about arrests, Hopkins said, and a criminal background check on Jones, who also has used the last name Minter, did not reveal his June 9, 2000, arrest during a police sweep of a known crack house on North 19th Street. "We checked today and there is still nothing that came up on him," Hopkins said Tuesday. "Evidently, there is a delay in getting the information to the (Department of Public Safety). We will be investigating this, and if indeed this is true, then it will, in fact, affect his employment here." Hopkins said policy dictates that no one with a felony conviction can work for the TYC. "Our policy requires that if you get a speeding ticket, you report it to human resources," Hopkins said. "Anything as minor as that you have to report. This occurred before he was an employee. It looks like he pleaded out the day before he came to work, but he didn't misstate anything on his application." Jones' attorney, Ron Moody, said it would be a "damn shame" if Jones loses his job. "All I know is that this young man took an 80-hour course of study and passed it and his (report by probation officers) was excellent. The probation officer recommended probation, so it was not like it was a hinky deal or anything. I hate it that he is going to lose his job, but if that is policy, it is policy." Prosecutor Matt Johnson recommended that Jones be sentenced to six years in prison on the drug charge, but neither opposed nor recommended probation. The judge ordered a background report by the probation department before sentencing Jones. Jones was among three others arrested at what police called in reports "a house that is strictly nothing more than a crack house." No one lived at the residence in the 1700 block of North 19th and the only furniture in the house was a TV, two sofas and a radio, police reports indicate. "The house was used solely for the purpose of distributing cocaine," a Waco drug enforcement officer wrote in his report. When officers arrived, Jones jumped from a back porch and tried to climb a fence in the back yard before an officer grabbed him. The officer said that Jones threw a pill bottle that contained 35 "rocks" of crack cocaine that weighed 9.7 grams. The officers also recovered 78 other rocks of crack, some marijuana, crack pipes, scales and two pistols and a rifle at the house, reports indicate. Prosecutors dismissed a misdemeanor marijuana possession charge against Jones as part of the plea bargain. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth