Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 Source: Oak Ridger (TN) Copyright: 2002 The Oak Ridger Contact: http://www.oakridger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1146 Author: Beverly Majors DRUGS, MURDER CREATE FAMILY TURMOIL Mart Freeman died Jan. 20, 2001. He was born Jan. 8, 1972. Ironically, his first days on earth and his last day on earth were on the same street -- Wadsworth Circle. On the day Mart Freeman was born, his parents, Dora and Howard Freeman, were living just a few hundred yards from the site where their son died 29 years later. Mart Freeman was murdered on Jan. 20, a year ago come Sunday, and his murder, the details of his death and what his parents believe has been a lack of justice have torn the family apart. "This has been one hell of a month," Dora Freeman said Thursday. "Mart's birthday was on the eighth and he was killed on the 20th." The Freemans are just living day to day, trying to cope. Both say they don't understand why one man is in jail for the crime and others involved are still out on the streets. Christopher Oliver, 29, is the only person Oak Ridge police have officially charged in the murder of Mart Freeman. Terrance Anthony, 33, was charged along with Oliver last February but Assistant District Attorney General Jan Hicks dismissed the murder warrant and took the case to a grand jury. Because of that action, Anthony's attorney, District Public Defender Tom Marshall, cried foul and had the indictment against his client dismissed also. Marshall contends that because Anthony was served with a warrant for murder, he was entitled by law to have a preliminary hearing. Criminal Court Judge James B. "Buddy" Scott agreed with Marshall and dismissed the indictment. Anthony remains free while Oliver remains in the Anderson County jail under $500,000 bond. "Anthony is presumed innocent," said Hicks. "He has not been charged in this offense." Hicks said the district attorney general's office could have appealed Scott's decision but chose not to take action. A status hearing and a deadline for attorneys to set other court schedules is to be held Jan. 25 in Criminal Court. "We (the DA's office) have just finished with discovery and released our discovery evidence to Oliver's attorneys," Hicks said. "A plea or trial date should be announced on Jan. 25." "I would like to see Oliver get life, if not death," said Dora Freeman. "But death won't do any good. He'd get off easy." But in talking about her sorrow and the loss of her son, she said, "I don't want anyone to hurt like I have." Mart Freeman's body was found by police about 8:15 p.m. on Wadsworth Circle. His mother's car was found parked in an on-street parking space several feet from where his body was found. He had been shot once in the back of the head, his throat had been slashed and he had several other stab wounds. Police have described the murder as a drug-related homicide but the Freemans insist there's more to the story. "I don't appreciate the words 'drug deal gone wrong' when the police were behind it," Dora Freeman said. "They (police officers) are acting like they didn't get him to work for them when they did." Dora Freeman has said her son was addicted to drugs and had been charged by police with drug offenses. She said police officers and Anderson County Sheriff's Department deputies talked him into working as an informant. "I'm about to come to the conclusion that it's not the drugs, it's the legality of them," Howard Freeman said. "The bottom line is if they were legal, drugs would be taxed, be in a controlled setting, and get the criminal element out of it." Howard Freeman said it was "all about the money." "The so-called war on drugs is a joke," he said. "From the police departments to the Congress, ethically and morally, they are all involved." He said his son should have been in treatment. "He should not have been pressured into being an informant," he said. "Maybe when some of the big boys' sons or daughters get killed, maybe then they would stop it." And, both agree, drugs tear families apart. The pain is worse when drugs cause a son's death. Dora and Howard Freeman are currently separated. Mart Freeman's children, Chelsea, 9, and Bryan, 8, are without their father. Bryan won't talk about it and Chelsea is still in counseling, Dora Freeman said. "Those kids are tore all to pieces," she said of her grandchildren. "I have lost everything," Howard Freeman said. "I have lost my son and now my wife. This family is turned upside down." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth