Pubdate: Sun, 16 Nov 2003 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2003 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Cary clack Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) TULIA PICKING UP THE PIECES OF SHATTERED JUSTICE TULIA - The Statue of Liberty greets me as I drive into Tulia on U.S. 87. She doesn't know that Tulia scares me more than Jasper. Say the name Jasper, and the image of a screaming man being dragged to his death on a dark East Texas road is pulled across people's minds. Mention Tulia and it's likely to invoke little more than a furrowed brow and vacant gaze. If its significance is known, it's doubtful that anyone will associate it with the Statue of Liberty. Yet she salutes me with her torch. It's actually a green and weathered 6-foot replica of the statue that stands in front of a motel named Liberty Suites. She was there June 16 to welcome Freddie Brookins Jr. and 12 other defendants who returned home on a bus after spending years in prison for crimes they didn't commit. It's why they were taken from their homes that Tulia scares me more than Jasper. Not the tiny town itself, hidden in the Panhandle between Amarillo and Lubbock. With its brick streets and more than two dozen churches, Tulia is an economically depressed town with closed and boarded-up businesses and where at 10 o'clock on a Friday morning, its pulse is hardly livelier than at 10 o'clock Sunday night. Nor is it the people of whom I'm wary, people who are polite and who easily shake your hand and engage you in conversation. Tulia scares me because this community's tragedy of people arrested, convicted and sentenced for things they didn't do could just as easily happen to me. Or you. And it's more likely to happen than our being victims of a motorized lynching. Values we hold dear to our national soul, enshrined in our laws and engraved on our public conscience - civil liberties, the presumption of innocence, fair trials - were shattered in Tulia, and it's now up to this farming town of less than 6,000 to pick up the pieces. The danger of picking up broken pieces is in cutting yourself, but Tulia has been cut enough and already has bled too much. Tulia is Spanish for "destined for glory." But Tulia's name is a mistake. When it was settled in the 19th century, it was supposed to be named after nearby Tule Creek, but a misspelling changed its name. The mistake has outlasted the now anonymous man who made the clerical error. With fortune and reflection, Tulia's name will outlast that of Tom Coleman, the strange and devious man who did so much to tarnish its name and the names of its citizens. In another town, by mistake or malice, the tarnished name could be mine. It could be yours. The people of Tulia can't be blamed for bringing Coleman into their midst. The fault lies with those who hired him as an undercover agent for the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Trafficking Task Force, despite the soiled reputation he'd earned in previous law enforcement jobs. Nor can the people of Tulia be blamed for the infamous pre-dawn raid on July 23, 1999, in which 46 Tulians, 39 of them black, were arrested. That raid led to 38 of them being sentenced to prison with no evidence that Coleman actually made the drug buys from the defendants that he claimed. On Aug. 22, Gov. Rick Perry issued pardons to the defendants. Coleman has been indicted on three counts of perjury. What the people of Tulia must ask themselves is why so many of them were willing to believe the worst about fellow citizens with whom they'd lived for years. Why would they take the word of a stranger who had lived among them for only 18 months? Like Jasper in its moment of infamy, Tulia deserves the opportunity to search its soul for answers. When I visited Jasper on Easter weekend in 1999, between the trials of the men who murdered James Byrd Jr., I was impressed with the people's willingness to understand how this crime could happen in their community and to talk openly about it. Blacks and whites admitted to working harder at a civility they'd taken for granted, but the most powerful comment I heard came from Willis Webb, publisher and editor of the Jasper Newsboy: "We all have to ask ourselves, what little have I done that might have contributed to this - that allowed this to happen." Last month, I visited Tulia. Before my trips to both Jasper and Tulia, there were warnings from friends to be careful. The warnings were both playful and serious, but had I been white I doubt anyone would have been concerned about my safety. I understood. Race played a role in both crimes. I'm a black man. Most of the Tulia defendants were black males. Many people, including Jeff Blackburn, the Amarillo attorney who was the lead defense counsel for all the defendants, believe that the drug sting was an attempt to get blacks, about 8 percent of the town's population, out of Tulia. Tulia scares me more than Jasper, because the threat of physical violence doesn't frighten me nearly as much as the possibility of being falsely accused and convicted of something I didn't do and having people believe the charges. The brutality in Jasper and the injustices in Tulia were so egregious as to transcend race. In Tulia, especially, what happened isn't simply an example of one rogue lawman turned loose on one community, but what can transpire when people become lax in safeguarding their constitutional rights and liberties. What happens when they neglect to assume responsibility for neighbors whose rights and freedoms have been violated? In Tulia, it doesn't matter now what Vicki Fry's ethnicity was when she was wrongfully arrested. What's important is that a woman who was seven months pregnant lost her baby days after her arrest. I'm not one of those who sees the government as some demonic entity dispatching its agents in black helicopters to burst into the homes of law-abiding citizens and ferry them away into the darkness. Still, that's what happened to Freddie Brookins Jr. On the morning of the raid in Tulia, Brookins was sleeping when his wife woke him to tell him someone was knocking on the door of their duplex in Tulia. He wrapped a bed sheet around himself and went to the door. When law officers brought him out of the house, they stripped him of the sheet he was covering himself with, revealing his nakedness in front of bright lights and television cameras. "Kids and everybody were outside," Brookins says. "Every corner you looked at they (law enforcement officers) were running into houses." Now 26, Brookins spent 31/2 years in prison for something he didn't do. On the jury were people who'd known him since he was a child. "Everyone in the jury, I knew," he says. "One guy was my basketball coach when I was a kid. I spent the night at his house, even as a teenager. His boys have spent the night with me. This man knew me, and he still convicted me." Inside Rip's Country Grill, Brookins walks by an older white man who shakes his hand and talks to him for a couple of minutes. "That's Darrell Stapp," he says. "He's good people." Near the Swisher County Archives and Museum on Southwest Second Street, I met a white woman who'd served on one of the juries. She says she reluctantly voted to convict one of the defendants. But that was before she knew about Coleman's duplicitous and criminal past. "I'll never serve on a jury again," she says, not wanting her name used. "Not if it's going to hurt people." Alan Bean, a Methodist minister in Tulia who helped publicize the plight of the "Tulia 46," believes that once the hurt caused by the sting operation is acknowledged, the town can move forward. "Anytime that you can get people on both sides of the issue to sit down at the table, it's positive," says Bean, referring to conversations now taking place. "If we can change the economic development instead of who was right and wrong about Coleman, we're putting it behind us." In the Jasper City Cemetery, the grave of James Byrd Jr. has a metallic tomb in which someone, an entire town even, can see his or her reflection. There is no similar monument in Tulia on which people can pause to reflect, only the faces of living men and women and the pain they're trying to get over. It's only when all of Tulia's citizens see each other and the promise of a future together that they'll bridge that pain. When that's done, it will no longer be symbolic that the Statue of Liberty standing in front of Liberty Suites has her back to the town. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin