Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jun 2003 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2003 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Jack Douglas Jr. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) TEXAS JUDGE RELEASES 13 CONVICTED DRUG OFFENDERS Undercover Narcotics Officer Accused Of Lying, Racism TULIA, Texas - Applause broke out in a packed courtroom Monday after 13 convicted drug offenders -- 11 of them black -- were released without bail by a judge who was told they had spent nearly four years behind bars because of a racist policeman who was a ``cancer'' within the justice system. ``It's good to be out,'' said a smiling Jason Jerome Williams, standing outside the Swisher County courthouse after being freed by visiting state District Judge Ron Chapman. ``I'm going to see my little girl tomorrow,'' Williams said. Williams, and 11 other men and a woman, were released on personal recognizance bonds while a state appellate court decides whether their drug-related convictions should be overturned. Their pursuer, former undercover narcotics officer Tom Coleman, is now suspected of lying during his testimony in the cases. Witnesses say Coleman exhibited racist behavior during his investigation of drug crimes in Tulia, located 35 miles south of Amarillo. He was employed by Swisher County as part of a regional narcotics task force. Gov. Rick Perry, who signed a bill that allowed the defendants to be freed, at least temporarily, could also issue pardons in the cases. The convictions made national news after the prosecutors' cases -- all built around Coleman's uncorroborated accounts -- began to fall apart during appeal. In all, 46 people, 39 of them black, were arrested in a July 1999 drug raid based on Coleman's work. Thirty-eight people were ultimately convicted, or they said they were scared into pleading guilty, fearing longer prison sentences if they contested Coleman's evidence. The punishments ranged from probation to 90 years in prison. After Monday's actions, only three defendants remained behind bars while their appeals move forward. Coleman has since been indicted on aggravated perjury charges. Before Chapman's ruling, he heard from Washington-based defense lawyers that the 13 defendants were pursued by Coleman mainly because of their ethnicity. The state's special prosecutor, Rod Hobson of Lubbock, concurred, telling the judge that it would be in the interest of justice to free the defendants. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh