Pubdate: Wed, 22 Jan 2003 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2003 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Gregory A. Hall, The Courier-Journal MISCONDUCT TRIAL OPENS FOR FORMER DRUG DETECTIVES Former Metro Narcotics detective Mark Watson was a soldier in the war on drugs who bent the rules but provided a valuable service to the community, according to his lawyer. Christie Richardson, who worked with Watson, was a loyal partner who put too much trust in the wrong person, her attorney said. But a prosecutor in one of the largest police misconduct trials in Jefferson County disputed both descriptions -- made in opening arguments yesterday during the officers' trial in Jefferson Circuit Court. ''Every war has its traitors,'' Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Jonathan Dyar said. ''You're looking at them.'' The former detectives, who have pleaded innocent to hundreds of counts, are accused of stealing payments to informants, creating search warrants by lying or photocopying judges' signatures, and theft. Richardson's attorney, Steve Schroering, sounded more like a prosecutor as he made it clear that his client's defense would hinge on blaming Watson for any wrongdoing. ''Christie Richardson should not be here today,'' and she will take the stand to explain her story, Schroering said. An attorney for Watson, Mary Sharp, said her client bent rules in his fight against illegal drugs but did not profit from those shortcuts. ''As you hear the testimony, remember the benefits our community has reaped from his efforts,'' she said. In his opening, Dyar said both detectives had destroyed the document they were sworn to uphold -- the U.S. Constitution. Holding a copy of the Constitution, Dyar asked the jurors not to lose sight of it among the dozens of warrants, payment forms and other documents they will have to consider. ''It's the document that matters most in this case. And it's the document that they had this much care for,'' he said, crumpling it. Watson and Richardson, who resigned from the county police last year, are accused of creating bogus search warrants with photocopied judges' signatures, with obtaining warrants through the use of fraudulent affidavits and with obtaining payments for informants who say they never got the money. The charges include burglary, possession of a forged instrument, tampering with public records, bribing a witness, theft, perjury and official misconduct. In addition, Watson faces one count of harassing a witness. If Watson, 39, and Richardson, 36, are found guilty of all the charges against them, they could be sentenced to up to 70 years in prison. Their alleged misdeeds occurred over about 13 months, starting around January 2001, and the two are accused in connection with 133 separate incidents of wrongdoing, according to court records. Jefferson Circuit Judge Steve Mershon seated 16 jurors for the case -- four of whom will be designated later as alternates. Dyar began his opening statement reciting the oath that Watson and Richardson both took to become county police officers. Watson and Richardson both were ''star players'' in Metro Narcotics, a joint agency of Louisville and Jefferson County, Dyar said. The number of cases they brought exceeded what other detectives did, he said. ''Their statistics were inflated by corruption of staggering proportions,'' he said. In Watson's opening, Sharp questioned the credibility of prosecution witnesses -- suspects in drug cases and confidential informants -- and the motives they would have for testifying. She said that her client is a scapegoat for a poorly operated narcotics unit and that supervisors didn't follow procedures for reviewing detectives' work. ''Metro Narcotics was sloppy,'' she said. ''It was not well-run.'' Watson's zeal for removing drugs from the streets prompted him to bend rules, she said. ''He's admitted that and he may get up here (on the witness stand) and tell you that himself,'' she said. Burglary charges require someone to break into a building with the intent to commit a crime, but Sharp said no evidence supports anything other than Watson entering a residence to remove illegal drugs, guns or drug money. ''His only intention was to stop the crime going on inside,'' she said. ''And that's his job.'' Regarding allegations that Watson made up cases, Sharp said he would let some people go after taking their drugs if they would give him the names of three dealers, she said. In his opening for Richardson, Schroering sought to separate his client from Watson, asking jurors to look at each defendant individually. Evidence shows that Watson wrote Richardson's name on false citations and signed affidavits on the warrants with photocopied judges' signatures, Schroering said. The indictment, however, in the counts where both are charged, said they acted alone or in conjunction with one another. Richardson did sign as a witness to payments to informants, Schroering said, because she trusted Watson. The paperwork routinely would be done at the office after the transaction, the lawyer said. Richardson didn't know of any wrongdoing, Schroering said. ''She trusted Mark Watson just like the supervisors trusted him,'' Schroering said. ''. . . She trusted him with her life, and that was a bad decision. That trust was what has destroyed her career.'' In the war on drugs, Watson became a ''criminal,'' Schroering said, ''but I'm asking you, don't let him destroy her.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D