Pubdate: Fri, 19 Dec 2003 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2003 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: David Sedeno Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/terry+mcEachern TULIA DRUG CASE PROSECUTOR FACES STATE BAR PANEL TODAY The prosecutor involved in the infamous Tulia drug cases that resulted in full pardons for 35 people will appear on Friday before a State Bar of Texas grievance committee looking into possible misconduct. Terry McEachern, the district attorney for Swisher and Hale counties, will appear before a three-member panel in Amarillo on Friday. Lubbock attorney Richard L. Wardroup, who himself has been twice briefly suspended from practicing law by the state bar for various infractions, will represent Mr. McEachern. Mr. Wardroup did not return telephone calls seeking comment, and State Bar of Texas officials declined to comment on the hearing. The panel is expected to hear testimony from several people involved in or familiar with the Tulia drug cases. The committee can dismiss the case against Mr. McEachern or, if it finds cause for misconduct, the committee may negotiate penalties, which could include a public or private reprimand, a suspension or disbarment. In 1999, 46 Tulia residents, most of them black, were arrested after an 18-month undercover operation conducted by Tom Coleman, a freelance investigator. He worked with minimal supervision as a member of the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Task Force, and his alleged drug buys were never corroborated with tape recordings, video recordings or witnesses. After an evidentiary hearing last spring, Mr. Coleman was found to be not credible, and a legal process began to clear the drug convictions of those defendants. In August, Gov. Rick Perry pardoned 35 of them. Mr. Coleman is facing two counts of perjury related to the drug investigations. In court documents presented earlier this year to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in an effort to clear the convictions, Mr. McEachern is accused knowing that the undercover agent was not credible but still pressing on with the cases. Those court documents - prepared by special prosecutors and attorneys for the defendants and signed by retired appeals court Judge Ron Chapman of Dallas - stated that Mr. McEachern gave conflicting accounts during the original trials and during a deposition earlier this year to review the convictions. Although grievance hearings or their existence usually are kept secret, Mr. McEachern asked Swisher County officials to help him pay for his defense. County officials declined. Friday's hearing is the latest in a series of personal legal skirmishes for Mr. McEachern. He is appealing a driving-while-intoxicated conviction in New Mexico. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin