Pubdate: Fri, 22 Feb 2002 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2002 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: James Gill TULANE STANDOUT HAS A LONG, HARD FALL Sure, Toney Converse has only himself to blame, but his fall from grace is awful sad to contemplate. Until Converse was suspended from the Tulane football team for unspecified "violations of team policy" a little less than two years ago, it seemed that fate had smiled upon him. He had been Tulane's leading rusher for the two previous seasons. His best year came in 1998, when Tulane was unbeaten, won the Liberty Bowl and was ranked 9th in the nation. Now he is doing 18 years in the state pen, no doubt much changed from the kid who went all sappy when coach Tommy Bowden moved to Clemson just before the Liberty Bowl. Emerging from the team's valedictory meeting with the coach, Converse said, "Everybody was trying to be a man, but we felt it in out hearts. He was like a father figure and it's hard to lose someone like that." After the next year, Converse was seventh on Tulane's all-time yardage list, but he never got to play as a senior. While on suspension from the team in May 2000, he was arrested when police raided his mother's house in River Ridge and caught him flushing cocaine down the john. He came up for trial in the middle of the 2000 football season, and escaped drug charges by pleading guilty to obstruction of justice. As a tailback, he was history. The experience did not discourage him from the drug trade. After someone snitched to the Sheriff's Office, Converse was caught in a sting in April last year when he was videotaped selling a rock to an undercover deputy. Deputies were evidently keen to make sure they had the goods on Converse, who was taped three more times selling cocaine. The next time they set him up, in May of last year, undercover deputies moved in to make an arrest. When Converse made a run for it, you might think that, having eluded so many linebackers in his time, he would not likely succumb to a tackle from a 30-year veteran of the sheriff's department. Lt. Al McNally, brought him down, however, outside a gas station in Metairie, not all that far from East Jefferson High School, where Converse graduated five years ago. So it was off to the slammer. Defense attorney Russell Stegeman argued at trial that Converse had been targeted because he was a football star. Deputies should have arrested Converse after the first deal instead of stringing out the investigation until he could be charged with four counts of distribution and one of possession with intent, according to Stegeman. Converse faced a minimum sentence of 15 years; Judge Joan Benge gave him 18. That ought to have satisfied all but most the rabid advocates of harsh retribution for drug dealers, but Jefferson Parish prosecutors wanted more, arguing at a hearing this week that Converse, as a second offender, should be sentenced to 60 years. Prosecutors generally seem to feel it is their job to press for the maximum sentence allowed by law, and maybe pity isn't part of their job description. Still, it requires a remarkable hardness of heart not to be satisfied when a 23-year-old is sent to prison for 18 years, and Benge rejected the proposition that she had been too lenient, citing Converse's youth and pointing out that the state Legislature is finally recognizing the folly of imposing savagely long sentences for drug offenses when the prisons are overcrowded anyway. Stegeman wanted the sentence reduced to the minimum 15 years, but Benge said Converse deserved more because he referred on one of the videotapes to "my people in Texas," which suggested he was a serious dealer. Former football stars, Benge pointed out, should not be treated any better or worse than other criminals. Converse, having squandered the talents that might have been his ticket to legitimate prosperity, is just another dope pusher now. He is the stupid jock who threw it all away, and maybe he got what he deserved. But, with that great Tulane season so fresh in the memory, it boggles the mind that Converse has come to this. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake