Pubdate: Wed, 05 Jun 2002 Source: Advocate, The (LA) Copyright: 2002 The Advocate, Capital City Press Contact: http://www.theadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2 Author: Brett Barrouquere ATTORNEY: FBI 'MANUFACTURED' CRIME The federal government "manufactured" a crack cocaine trafficking crime involving three former West Baton Rouge Jail guards, a defense attorney for one of the men said Tuesday. The first time any of the three men possessed crack cocaine was when an FBI agent handed it to Gerald Robertson Jr. on May 28, said Frank Saia, the attorney for former guard Warren Terrell Chapman. "There's no proof except for the sting, and the government manufactured that crime," Saia said during a bail hearing in U.S. District Court in Baton Rouge. Robertson, 25, of 4164 Mulatto Bend Road; Chapman, 7222 S. River Road, Addis; and Elliott Jermaine McQuillan, 21, 6956 U.S. 190, each were ordered released Tuesday by U.S. Magistrate Judge Docia Dalby on a $20,000 bond. They were arrested May 28 in Port Allen after being accused of taking bribes from inmates in exchange for drugs, cell phones and food. All three are charged with receipt of a bribe by a public official, possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine and possession of a firearm in relation to a drug-trafficking offense. Robertson and McQuillan are also charged with conspiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine. Saia said the FBI brought crack cocaine to the sting because the drug carries a longer prison sentence than marijuana, which several informants accused the men of smuggling into the jail. "That's sentence entrapment," Saia said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Rene Salomon said the three men knew what they were doing in the alleged smuggling operation. Robertson and McQuillan were arrested together. Salomon said McQuillan served as a lookout while Robertson took the bribe money and drugs from the FBI. After being arrested, each admitted to smuggling contraband items into the jail, Salomon said. Robertson was the most explicit of the group, Salomon said. "He said, 'I came out here to basically protect Mr. Robertson, and I knew a drug deal was going down,'" Salomon said. Salomon said the investigation started in December when Troy Lee Cummings, a federal inmate being held in the jail awaiting sentencing on drug-trafficking charges, told a federal investigator that he could not pass a drug test. The FBI began working with several federal inmates being held in the West Baton Rouge Parish Jail, said Saia and Angela Lockett, an attorney representing McQuillan. "The informants that said this only have something to gain," Lockett said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth