Pubdate: Wed, 24 Jul 2002 Source: Lubbock Avalanche-Journal (TX) Copyright: 2002 The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal Contact: http://www.lubbockonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/841 Author: Linda Kane, Avalanche-Journal Related: http://fojtulia.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm FINAL TULIA DRUG CASE DEFENDANT WINS DISMISSAL Zuri Bossett, the final defendant in a controversial 1999 drug bust in Tulia, could breathe a sigh of relief Tuesday after drug charges against her were formally dismissed. Her attorney called the case another example of deceitful police work by a former undercover agent whose testimony led to charges against 43 people, 37 of whom are black. Of the other six, three are Hispanic and three are white. Bossett, 23, of Amarillo had been accused of selling cocaine to undercover officer Tom Coleman three years ago. Bossett said Tuesday that she never sold drugs to Coleman, nor did she know what he looked like at the time. She had faced a sentence of two to 20 years in prison. Coleman claimed that he bought cocaine from Bossett at her sister's apartment in Tulia. Bossett said she wasn't there. "I was getting ready to go to college at Clarendon College," she said. "It was like two days before I moved in the dorm." Bossett, who is 7-months pregnant and a mother of an infant son, said her dismissal is a relief. "I'm just glad it's all over with," she said. The controversial Tulia drug busts have received national media attention, and Coleman's credibility has come under scrutiny. The Department of Justice continues to investigate the matter. Cases against at least two other defendants also have been dismissed. In April, Tonya White proved she was in Oklahoma at the time she supposedly sold drugs to Coleman in Tulia. Bank records showed that White had made a deposit at her bank in Oklahoma the same day that Coleman said she sold drugs to him in Tulia. The Avalanche-Journal left a message for Coleman at his home in Waxahachie but was unable to contact him Tuesday. Swisher County District Attorney, Terry McEachern, who would have prosecuted Bossett at a trial scheduled for Tuesday, said he weighed several factors before agreeing to dismiss the case. "We took into consideration several circumstances -- her age, how big a player the state thought she was. We didn't feel like she was a major dealer or anything else like that, and we did what we thought was right," he said. Bossett's attorney, Jeff Blackburn of Amarillo, said the case was dismissed because it lacked evidence. "I'm really glad he dismissed it. However, I honestly don't feel that he had any choice," Blackburn said. "Certainly after Tonya White's case in which we were able to reveal that Tom Coleman is not just a liar in general, but a liar in these accusations and clearly making them up out of thin air, prospects of a jury trial were pretty grim for Mr. McEachern." Blackburn, who is working on several of the Tulia cases with a group of attorneys for free, said he intends to help free the remaining 14 prisoners. Everyone accused deserves a new trial, he said. "This thing is growing. It's becoming a bigger national issue than ever before," Blackburn said. "It's not going to end until those people get released from prison and everybody that was involved gets a new trial." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake