Pubdate: Tue, 27 May 2003 Source: Statesman Journal (OR) Copyright: 2003 Statesman Journal Contact: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/427 Author: Editorial Board Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) HOUSE CAN DO ITS PART TODAY TO FREE TULIA 13 Like a skilled quarterback in a fourth-and-long situation, state Rep. Terry Keel, R-Austin, executed two heads-up plays this weekend to keep alive legislation that would grant bail to the Tulia 13. A Senate bill that would have freed the wrongfully convicted defendants was in jeopardy of expiring before the House could take it up, blocked behind other legislation. With time running out in the House to pass bills, Keel, chairman of the House Jurisprudence Committee, busted the logjam by advancing the bill to the head of the line and then passing a separate amendment that also would free Tulia defendants. Keel's bold maneuvers provide two avenues to freedom for the Tulia 13. Senate Bill 1948 - the bill Keel rescued - is the better of the two. It would allow a district judge in Swisher County, the defendants' home county, to grant bail immediately. By contrast, the amendment would not take effect until Sept. 1. We have no doubt that the Tulia 13 ultimately will be freed, if not by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, then by the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. The latter is evaluating whether Tulia defendants should be pardoned or granted clemency. But those actions can take weeks, months, or in the court's case, up to two years. Allowing them to suffer in prison only rubs salt in wounds inflicted by a dysfunctional Texas justice system. The 13 defendants - who were unable to make pre-trial bail - have been imprisoned since their arrests in 1999. Forty-six Tulia residents, including 39 African Americans, were arrested in a bogus 1999 drug sting by then-undercover law officer Tom Coleman. Thirty-eight were convicted on the uncorroborated testimony of Coleman, who targeted Tulia's African American community. Coleman has not only been thoroughly discredited, but indicted on felony perjury charges related to the case. State District Judge Ron Chapman, who presided over evidentiary hearings in March, concluded that Coleman's testimony was "riddled with perjury and purposely evasive answers." Chapman described Coleman as "the most devious, nonresponsive law enforcement witness this Court has witnessed in 25 years on the bench." Thanks to Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, who authored SB 1948, and to Keel, the Tulia 13 can be freed as early as this week if the House passes SB 1948 today. It requires a two-thirds vote from the House and the signature of Gov. Rick Perry to take effect immediately. The House should not hesitate to follow their Senate collegues and pass SB 1948 with the margin it needs to take immediate effect, and Perry should sign it. But the repairs to the state's damaged criminal justice system only begin with that basic correction of a horrible miscarriage of justice. We again urge the State Bar of Texas to investigate whether Swisher County District Attorney Terry McEachern abused or violated professional conduct rules that require prosecutors to make timely disclosure to the defense of all information known to the prosecutor that would negate the guilt of people accused of crimes. Legal findings to the Court of Criminal Appeals indicate this didn't happen for Tulia defendants, and that impaired their ability to get fair trails. The breakdown of justice goes further than the rogue cop and overzealous prosecutor. There is the issue of regional, stand-alone drug task forces that aren't accountable to anyone. It was such a task force that hired Coleman and turned him loose on a hapless African American community in Tulia. Keel is pushing a proposal to rein in such drug task forces by denying them state funding if they fail to reform their structures. House lawmakers should pass the amendment to SB 1952. Freedom is just around the corner for the 13 defendants, including a mother who has been separated from her two young children for 4 1/2 years. With their votes, House members can help send Kizzie White and 12 others home. They certainly don't belong in prison - and never did - - for crimes they didn't commit. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek