Pubdate: Tue, 18 Mar 2003 Source: Amarillo Globe-News (TX) Copyright: 2003 Amarillo Globe-News Contact: http://amarillonet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/13 Author: Greg Cunningham Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) HEARINGS BEGIN ON '99 DRUG BUST TULIA - Evidentiary hearings on the controversial 1999 Tulia drug bust kicked off Monday with a full house and witnesses questioning the integrity of the undercover officer who made the cases. The 242nd District courtroom was packed with spectators and attorneys in town for evidentiary hearings in the writ of habeas corpus appeals of four of the people convicted in the sting. The four defendants - Jason Jerome Williams, Christopher Eugene Jackson, Freddie Brookins Jr. and Joe Moore - all sat quietly to hear testimony that mostly called into question the honesty of their accuser, Tom Coleman. The four men were convicted and received sentences ranging from 20 to 90 years in prison. The cases of the four men were upheld on direct appeal, but the habeas corpus appeals of the four men were remanded back to Tulia last year. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals asked the district court to determine whether the defendants were convicted solely on the word of Coleman and whether evidence of wrongdoing in Coleman's background was wrongly kept from defense attorneys. Judge Ron Chapman, a retired Dallas judge, is hearing the cases because District Judge Ed Self recused himself. Vanita Gupta with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund explained how her side intended to show that the state withheld important evidence that Coleman was not reliable. Gupta was joined by more than a dozen attorneys, many from national law firms. Attorneys for the state countered in their opening arguments that the state was not required to turn over the evidence because it would be inadmissible under state rules of evidence or was public record that the defense should have found for itself. John Nation, acting special prosecutor, said no demand for corroboration exists. "There is no requirement that the officer be corroborated by an independent source," Nation said. "That's a jury question, and that question has been answered negatively for the defendants." The first witness for the defense, district attorney Ori White, testified he does not believe Coleman is honest. White, whose district covers Pecos County where Coleman was employed by the sheriff's department, said he represented Coleman's ex-wife in divorce and custody hearings. "My client was concerned for her safety, and I was concerned for my safety," White said. "I was concerned enough that I wore a bullet-proof vest to the final hearing." Defense attorney Desmond Hogan asked White whether he would have given the same testimony if he had been contacted at the time of the trial. White said he would have. That question was asked of each defense witness, and could be important because defense attorneys hope to prove that if evidence from Coleman's background had been turned over, Coleman's testimony could have been called into question. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake