Pubdate: Wed, 19 Mar 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: Associated Press COLLEAGUES BLAST EX-TULIA DRUG COP TULIA -- A former undercover agent whose testimony was used to convict four defendants in the 1999 Tulia drug busts was portrayed Monday as untrustworthy, racist and prejudiced. The testimony about Tom Coleman came from a district attorney and other law enforcement officers as evidentiary hearings began for the four defendants in Swisher County. The convictions of the four men, whose sentences ranged from 20 to 90 years, were upheld on direct appeal. However, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals last year asked the trial court for clarification on whether the four -- Jason Jerome Williams, Christopher Eugene Jackson, Freddie Brookins Jr. and Joe Moore -- were convicted solely on Coleman's word. The appeals court also wants to know if the state failed to turn over information from Coleman's background that may have impeached his testimony. Civil rights groups say the arrests were racially motivated. District Attorney Ori White, whose district includes Pecos County where Coleman worked at the sheriff's department, testified he didn't believe Coleman was trustworthy. Representing Coleman's wife in their divorce case, White said, "I was concerned enough that I wore a bullet-proof vest to the final hearing." Coleman fell behind on support payments and eventually relinquished parental rights, White told defense attorney Desmond Hogan he would have given the same testimony at the time of the trial. Former Pecos County Sheriff Bruce Wilson also testified he considered Coleman untrustworthy and was about to fire him when Coleman walked out in the middle of a shift. The defendants all sat quietly, occasionally leaning forward to better hear testimony, the Amarillo Globe-News reported in its Tuesday editions. Sam Esparza, a criminal investigator for the Fort Stockton Police Department, said Coleman acted inappropriately and disobeyed orders the two times Esparza worked with him in the late 1980s. At the time, Coleman as a peace officer in Fort Stockton, the county seat of Pecos County. "I felt like there was something wrong with this guy," Esparza said. In one incident, Esparza said that Coleman, while riding in his patrol car, laughed and said, "'You just don't sound like a Mexican. You don't act like one. You don't even look like one.' After that, I didn't want him with me any more." "I don't condone the type of behavior that this man displays as a peace officer," Esparza said in a story in Tuesday's Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Juan Castro, now chief of police in Fort Stockton, said Coleman was a "paranoid gun freak." Coleman, who is no longer in law enforcement, worked alone and used no audio or video surveillance. Little or no corroborating evidence was introduced during the trials. The drug sting resulted in the arrest of 46 people, 39 of them black. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex