Pubdate: Sat, 23 Aug 2003 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2003 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/162 Author: Adam Liptak, The New York Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) PERRY PARDONS 35 DEFENDANTS IN TULIA BUSTS Gov. Rick Perry pardoned 35 people on Friday who were arrested in Tulia in 1999 on the word of a white undercover agent who has since been indicted on perjury charges. Thirty-one of those pardoned are black. "Questions surrounding testimony from the key witness in these cases weighed heavily on my final decision," Perry said, referring to the agent, Tom Coleman. The arrests in Tulia, the Swisher County seat of 5,000 residents between Amarillo and Lubbock, attracted national attention, in part because the Swisher County sheriff invited the media to photograph disheveled suspects being rounded up early on the morning of July 23, 1999. Of the 46 people initially charged, 40 are black. They were accused of dealing cocaine in the small Panhandle farming community. Drug trafficking is often lucrative, but none of the suspects appeared to be living beyond his or her means. Eventually, 38 people went to prison, meaning that one of every 11 African-Americans in Tulia was behind bars based on one man's uncorroborated word. Freddie Brookins Jr., 26, served 3 1/2 years of a 20-year sentence. He has been free since June, when Perry signed legislation allowing 14 people who were still in prison to be released on bail while he and the courts considered their cases. "It really takes a lot off your mind," Brookins said of the pardon. But bitterness mixed in with his relief. "What hurt the most was that the people in the courtroom and on the jury knew me and knew I hadn't done it," he said. "All of it had to do with race. It's a stupid way to try to get people out of town." Jeff Blackburn, an Amarillo lawyer who represents many of those pardoned Friday, said indiscriminate spending in the so-called "war on drugs" was the reason for the false arrests. He was especially critical of the Texas Panhandle Regional Narcotics Trafficking Task Force, a federally financed consortium of 26 Texas counties, based in Amarillo. "The government agency that caused the Tulia fiasco was the task force," he said. "They were the group that hired Coleman. They were that group that allegedly supervised Coleman. We believe it was this group that encouraged him to make the largest number of cases using whatever methods he chose. The more productive he appeared to be, the more funding money they could get." Task force officials did not respond to messages seeking comments. At a Tulia hearing in March, Coleman and other witnesses testified about his troubled law enforcement career, unorthodox methods, pervasive errors, combustible temperament and apparent racism. Coleman blithely conceded that he made routine use of an offensive racial epithet. Coleman also testified that although most of the drug transactions that he swore to took place in public places, he did not wear a recording device, arrange for video surveillance, ask anyone to accompany him, ask anyone to observe the deals or fingerprint the plastic bags containing the drugs. He worked alone and did not tape record his drug buys. Instead, he said, he would jot down information on his leg. No drugs, weapons or large sums of cash were found during the arrests. Among the people arrested but not pardoned on Friday were seven whose cases had been dismissed before trial; two who were on probation at the time of their arrests and so ineligible for pardons; one whose conviction is not final; and one who has died. Coleman pleaded not guilty to perjury charges in April. His phone is disconnected, and his lawyer did not return a call seeking comment. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is considering a recommendation from the judge who supervised the March hearing that all of the Tulia convictions be overturned. It is not clear what effect the pardons will have on those proceedings. The pardons will, however, open the way for civil lawsuits by those charged in the cases. "We're planning on exhausting every single remedy available to our clients," said Vanita Gupta, a lawyer with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which represents many of the Tulia defendants. The first civil suit arising from the Tulia arrests was, apparently coincidentally, filed on Friday in federal court in Amarillo. It was brought by two women against whom charges were brought and then dropped before trial, as Coleman's evidence started to unravel. The suit says that the people and agencies responsible for Coleman's supervision violated the plaintiffs' civil rights by sending him into the field and trusting his information when there was plenty of evidence that he was unreliable. The suit seeks unspecified damages and a court order prohibiting more drug stings targeting African-Americans in Tulia. One of the plaintiffs, Tonya White, was lucky. She had, according to court records, an unbeatable alibi. On the day that Coleman said she sold him cocaine in Tulia, she was more than 300 miles away, in Oklahoma City. She had visited an Oklahoma City bank at almost the precise time of the supposed drug deal, and she had a time-stamped check to prove it. The task force's background check on Coleman in 1997 revealed, the suit says, that his boss in a previous law enforcement job said Coleman had disciplinary and "possible mental problems;" and that one of his references said he "needed constant supervision, had a bad temper and would tend to run to his mother for help." The suit adds that a more diligent check would have revealed Coleman had stolen gas and run up bad debts in another law enforcement job before leaving town abruptly in the middle of a shift. His boss there had told the Texas agency that licenses peace officers that Coleman "should not be in law enforcement." Eight months into the undercover investigation, Coleman's supervisors received a warrant calling for his arrest for stealing gasoline. They arrested him, let him out on bail and allowed him to make restitution for the gas and other debts of $7,000. The undercover investigation then continued. Many of the Tulia defendants have agreed to a settlement of $250,000 in exchange for an agreement not to sue local officials. But they remain free to sue the task force and are expected to do so. White and the other plaintiff in the suit filed Friday, Zuri Bossett, were not part of that deal, and they have sued several officials including Coleman and the Swisher County district attorney and sheriff. The district attorney, Terry McEachern, said Friday that he had not seen the suit. "I don't think there is any merit to it whatsoever," he said. Kizzie White, who served four years of a 25-year sentence before being released in June, described her reaction to being pardoned. "Today is just a wonderful day," she said. "It's wonderful to be free. I just feel like screaming my guts out." She expressed hope for Tulia's future. "I'm just glad that justice was done," she said, "and I pray that everyone can come together and put this behind us." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom