Pubdate: Fri, 19 Apr 2002 Source: Observer of West Texas (TX) Contact: 2002, Observer of West Texas Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2204 Author: Alan Bean Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) MCEACHERN FOLDS District attorneys understand the old Kenny Rogers song: You got to know when to hold 'em and know when to fold 'em. On a drab April morning, in the shadow of the Swisher County Courthouse, Terry McEachern glanced mournfully at his cards and decided to fold. Until recently, every hand in the Tulia poker game had boiled down to a swearing match between Coleman and the accused. Sheriff Larry Stewart bolstered Coleman's reputation by labeling him "a man of integrity and professionalism." Governor George W. Bush enhanced the impression by naming the undercover man "Texas Lawman of the Year." Thus, the first two cards in District Attorney McEachern's hand were the king and the ace of spades. Defense counsel wasn't so lucky. Working on the theory that everybody looks like a drug dealer first thing in the morning, police officers dragged defendants from their beds and paraded them in front of the television cameras in their underwear, their teeth unbrushed and their hair uncombed. A local newspaper editor heightened the effect by calling the Defendants "scumbags" and "known drug dealers." Defense attorneys started the game with a three of clubs and a two of diamonds. Lady luck was not always kind to Mr. McEachern. To the media, Tom Coleman was Supernarc: a mythic figure who "walked the walk and talked the talk" with snarling, gun toting drug lords so that blue-eyed babies could grow up in a drug free world. Unfortunately, the real Tom Coleman was a mystery man-the joker in the deck. If some enterprising attorney yanked open Coleman's closet, only God knew what skeletons might tumble out. Mr. McEachern left that closet door undisturbed. Now every gambler knows that the secret to survivin' Is knowin' what to throw away and knowin' what to keep. The Texas rules of evidence place an officer's professional history off limits, unless a defense attorney demonstrates that a potential witness has motive and opportunity to tamper with evidence or falsify testimony. Realizing that Judge Ed Self would allow no scrutiny of Coleman's past, Mr. McEachern breathed a sigh of relief and tossed his joker onto the discard pile. The real Tom Coleman never set foot in the Swisher County District courtroom. Instead, defense counsel had to reckon with Supernarc and the District Attorney found himself holding the queen, the king, and the ace of spades. Unfortunately, agent Coleman failed to live up to his press clippings. On the witness stand, he had trouble remembering his name if it wasn't entered on the police report. When confronted with glaring inconsistencies in his testimony, Supernarc just changed his story on the fly. Worse yet, several defendants claimed they were working when the alleged drug deal went down and had the time cards to prove it. No matter! The prosecution only had to prove that the crime happened on or about the day mentioned in Coleman's police report. As McEachern informed the jury in the trial of Joe Moore, "on or about" means "any time prior to the grand jury returning an indictment." So long as the deed was done during the eighteen months Coleman was in Tulia, inconsistencies in the agent's testimony were immaterial. In fact, Coleman's errors and evasions in trial one couldn't be mentioned in trial two. His blunders in trials one and two were inadmissible in trial three, and so on. At the insistence of Judge Ed Self, each case was hermetically sealed from the others. Prosecutor McEachern tossed a six of hearts onto the discard pile and drew the coveted jack of spades. In December of 1999, as treetops glistened and children listened to hear sleigh bells in the snow, a jury filed into the Swisher County courtroom to render a verdict in the case of Joe Welton Moore. A guilty verdict would constitute a strong precedent, dealing Mr. McEachern the precious ten of spades he needed to complete a royal flush. A not-guilty verdict was unthinkable. Had one jury doubted Coleman's credibility subsequent juries could easily follow suit. As it turned out, Mr. McEachern got his royal flush and Joe Moore got ninety years. Sixteen months later, Tanya Michelle White proves she was in Oklahoma the day of the alleged crime. Big deal! Maybe Tom got his facts a bit jumbled, or maybe the crime was committed a day earlier . . . or a month earlier . . . or later. If any date between January of 1998 and July of 1999 was fair game, why did Mr. McEachern fold so meekly? Is the District Attorney saying that eight Swisher County juries got the Coleman cases wrong? Perish the thought! "I believe the people of Swisher County are the best people in the world," he told television reporters the day the charges against Ms. White were dismissed. "They are good Christian people, and I'm proud to be a part of them." Has the Prosecutor lost faith in his star witness? Not at all! "I don't think (Coleman) manufactured testimony intentionally," McEachern advised the New York Times. Later he assured a Lubbock reporter that he believed everything Coleman had told him, admitting only that the undercover man, like every fallible mortal, "has made some mistakes." But glaring inconsistencies have marred Coleman's testimony from the beginning, so what's new? In February 2000, Billy Don Wafer proved he was working when he was supposed to be selling drugs to Supernarc. But this was at a probation revocation hearing, not a trial, and Judge Ed Self was weighing the facts. "I'm not convinced by the preponderance of the evidence presented today," the honorable Mr. Self concluded, "that the allegations in the new motion to revoke are true." Judge Self disagreed with eight Swisher County juries because he was privy to the damning facts he had kept jurors from hearing: That a County Attorney in Morton, Texas said he saw Coleman stealing gas. That a holy host of Cochran County merchants had accused Mr. Coleman of walking the walk of a con artist and talking the talk of a two-bit hustler. That the Sheriff of Cochran County thought the undercover agent shouldn't be in law enforcement. As if that weren't enough, Judge Self knew Coleman's testimony had been a jumble of inconsistencies, improbabilities and outright lies from the get-go. These disturbing facts returned Billy Wafer to his wife and children. In the trial of Kareem White in September 2000, it was back to business as usual. Mr. Coleman told a Swisher County jury that he only made one narcotics purchase on a single day. Then he related how he had purchased drugs from Defendant A, inscribed the particulars on his leg, driven to Amarillo (fifty miles away), filed his report, booked in his evidence, and returned to Tulia to purchase narcotics from Defendant B, all within forty-five minutes. Grim faces circled the jury room as the deliberations began. Mr. Coleman had inspired little confidence, but Mr. McEachern had left them with a stern warning: if they returned a not-guilty verdict they were calling Sheriff Stewart a liar. They respected and admired their Sheriff and didn't want to embarrass him. Nor did they want to challenge the competency of jurors in the first seven Tulia drug trials. Kareem's trial was just like the others and they had all ended in guilty verdicts. Besides, two White kids had already been convicted, and if they were guilty Kareem must be guilty too. Mr. McEachern had laid down his cards with a flourish-nothing beats a royal flush. Most of the jurors could remember leaping to their feet as Kareem sped across the goal line hoisting the football in triumph. They could still see him running the anchor leg of the mile relay, leaving hapless rivals in his wake as loyal Hornet fans cheered themselves hoarse. Kareem White was once the toast of Tulia, and now this! Such a tragedy-such a waste! A grim-faced jury filed back into the courtroom leaving an empty Kleenex box behind them. Mr. McEachern won the Kareem White case in the Swisher County courtroom only to suffer a stunning reversal in the court of public opinion. Attorneys and reporters from across the nation knew about Cochran County. Having poured over Coleman's testimony in all eight Tulia drug trials, they knew he was telling a new lie every time he opened his mouth. The jury may have swallowed the Supernarc mythology, but the folks in the cheap seats were watching Pinocchio, his nose as long as a pool cue. Swisher County jurors love their Sheriff as much as they hate drugs and drug dealers. But they also believe in fairness and the principle of equality before the law. Now that the truth about Tom Coleman has finally worked its way to Tulia, Supernarc has melted away like the Wicked Witch of the West. With nobody to place in the witness box but poor, befuddled Tom Coleman, Mr. McEachern's royal flush has dwindled down to a pair of eights. So, content with his string of convictions, Mr. McEachern lays down his cards, smiles nervously, and strolls away from the table. Not so fast, Mr. McEachern. Forty-six men and women have had the life crushed out of them to insure your reelection. Mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers live in anonymous agony so you could run unopposed in the last election. Dozens of orphaned children have sacrificed a mother or a father (often both) so you could rest easy at night. And what of the good citizens of Tulia you claim to love so deeply? The sign may say, "The richest land and the finest people," but that's not the perception playing in the national press. True, the citizens of Swisher County do not blame you for their sad plight, and perhaps they're right. Maybe you aren't the real villain in this melodrama. Perhaps the fault lies with the man who allowed the Supernarc mythology to get rolling in the first place. The Honorable Ed Self set up this card game and the hard questions must be laid at his feet. The rules of evidence were so distorted that undeniable proof of innocence was a defendant's only hope. Tanya Michelle White had the proof-most defendants did not. A fair, judicious application of the rules of evidence would have given defense attorneys a fighting chance. Just try to sell Tom Coleman to a jury in Cochran County and see what happens. Or what about Ellis County where Coleman was fired for trying to extort sexual favors from a confidential informant, do you think jurors there would take the man seriously? Judge Self couldn't trust jurors to sort things out for themselves so he rigged the game in favor of the prosecution. The result: bogus convictions and superficial charges of racism. Mr. Self, the court of public opinion cannot be ignored forever. With legal storm clouds massing on the eastern horizon it's time to cut your losses. You have foisted a legal travesty on the people of Swisher County and should make amends while there's still time. As the old song says: You got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em, Know when to walk away . . . and know when to run. MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk