Pubdate: Wed, 06 Feb 2002 Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO) Copyright: 2002, Denver Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371 Author: Ron Word, Associated Press Writer INFORMANT IN FAKE DRUG CASES DENIES WRONGDOING One of the informants involved in the fake drug cases handled by the Dallas Police Department said he performed honest work for police. The 44-year-old told Dallas-Fort Worth television station KDFW he was tired of being treated like a bad guy and is ready to talk to the FBI. The FBI is investigating dozens of questionable narcotics purchases initiated by paid confidential informants. The informant, who was not identified by the station, said he wanted to take a polygraph test to prove he didn't set up any innocent people in drug cases and did not steal any money from drug dealers or police. The man, who was arrested by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service as an illegal immigrant, said he had been fired by police. He also said he was shocked to find out the alleged drugs from his cases turned out to be gypsum. The man has been connected to more than 20 drug cases. The police chief has said the man was the highest paid informant at $200,000. But the man said he received no more than $50,000. He said police never asked him if he was an illegal immigrant. Meanwhile Tuesday, prosecutors said it took them four months to get information from the Dallas Police Department after they questioned a large cocaine bust in September. Prosecutors said they didn't realize the scope of the problem until mid-January. "Until we got down to the point of putting together those 59 cases, we didn't have our arms around this," First Assistant District Attorney Mike Carnes told The Dallas Morning News in Wednesday's editions. "We were trying to put the pieces together to figure out what the puzzle was, but we still, in the month of January, were getting information." In September, prosecutors said, a police detective was warned about a large cocaine bust that involved fake drugs. But it took another four months for police to hand over their files to help identify defendants who may have been wrongfully accused. Prosecutors in late September said they were seeing the bad drug cases multiply but still didn't have the name of the primary informant. Police spokeswoman Janice Houston declined comment Tuesday because of the FBI investigation. Prosecutors have dismissed 59 cases that involved two undercover officers and four questionable confidential informants. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D