Pubdate: Wed, 27 Feb 2002 Source: Daily Herald, The (UT) Copyright: 2002 The Daily Herald Page: A1 Contact: http://www.harktheherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1480 Author: Debra Jandreau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) CHARGES DROPPED AGAINST WOMAN ACCUSED OF SMUGGLING DRUGS TO INMATE PROVO -- A 4th District Court judge has ruled that law enforcement officers used entrapment to get a former Utah County jailer to accept drugs for an inmate. Judge Ray Harding Jr. 's ruling validated defense attorney Gary Weight's claim that undercover agents tried to mislead 31- year-old Melissa Sprague into thinking she would be taking creatine (a muscle enhancer), when they gave her methamphetamines. "Whatever Sprague's intention, this court finds that placed in this situation by the police, confronted by a stranger demanding her acceptance of the drugs, the defendant acted out of pressure to escape," Harding wrote in a ruling issued Friday in which he dismissed all of Sprague's charges. Sprague had only been employed as a deputy for about a year when she developed a personal relationship with an inmate. She eventually admitted to smuggling cookies, candy and other personal items to him. During an evidentiary hearing, Weight said Sprague had no intention of bringing drugs to the inmate and asked Harding to review recorded audio and videotapes of the transaction and police interviews. "As I read through the ruling, I found that Judge Harding carefully and methodically examined all the evidence and facts," Weight said Tuesday. "It was well thought out and we're satisfied with the decision." Sprague was arrested in June and charged with first-degree felony possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute after she took an 8-ounce bag of methamphetamines from an undercover officer working with the Utah Major Crimes Task Force. Utah County Deputy Attorney David Clark said he was surprised by Harding's ruling. Clark said during the evidentiary hearing that officers did not induce Sprague to take the meth but offered her every opportunity to avoid the deal. "We definitely plan to appeal this," Clark said. Clark said prosecutors have 30 days after the ruling to appeal the case to the Utah Attorney General's office. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex