Pubdate: Wed, 07 Apr 2004 Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) Copyright: 2004 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. Contact: http://www.knoxnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226 Author: JAMIE SATTERFIELD DRUG CONSPIRACY LAWS PASS TEST WITH GUILTY VERDICTS In this test, federal prosecutors walked away with an A. A jury in U.S. District Court delivered a sweeping series of guilty verdicts Tuesday in the region's first-ever federal conspiracy case involving a methamphetamine lab. It was a test case of sorts on the U.S. Attorney's Office's ability to use drug conspiracy laws to battle what has been deemed a meth epidemic in East Tennessee's rural communities. "We're pleased with the verdict," Assistant U.S. Attorney James Brooks said. Although Brooks and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeff Theodore downplayed the idea either made local history in successfully prosecuting meth-makers as drug conspirators, Theodore said he hopes like-minded suspects take note. "Hopefully, this trial will have a deterrent effect on others who might be tempted to engage in this kind of conduct," Theodore said. The jury took less than two hours to deem four Monroe County citizens charged in the conspiracy guilty, collectively, of more than a dozen counts. The jury found a fifth defendant, Steven Bivens, guilty of being a convicted felon in possession of a shotgun. Judge Thomas Phillips dismissed conspiracy charges against Bivens Monday after attorney Bruce Poston successfully argued prosecutors had failed to link him to the conspiracy. The precedent-setting case stemmed from a November 2002 search at a ramshackle trailer and shed owned by Ernie Miller, who was convicted Tuesday along with his wife, Mary Miller; his stepdaughter, Samantha Moreno; and family friend, Richard "Rambo" Ramsey. The Monroe County Sheriff's Department had been investigating the clan for more than a year, according to testimony. On Nov. 27, 2002, the agency sent in deputies armed with a search warrant and discovered a "working lab" in the shed with a batch of the drug brewing on a hot plate, Theodore has said. Brooks outlined each of the four defendants' roles in the conspiracy in his closing arguments Tuesday. Ernie Miller, he said, was the leader, while Mary Miller supplied materials to make the drug and doled out the finished product to meth users. Moreno was the chief materials supplier, using her employee discount at the Wal-Mart where she worked to get the ordinary household products used to brew the drug, he said. Ramsey was "the cook," Brooks said. Defense attorneys contended prosecutors were trying to build a conspiracy case where none existed. Their clients, the attorneys argued, were a ragtag bunch of meth users, not drug barons. "Here sits the grand mogul of the methamphetamine empire of Monroe County," attorney Roland Cowden said in a mocking tone as he pointed to Ernie Miller. "We're talking about country people. We're talking about people who are uneducated, and they get along the best they can." Attorney Beth Ford told jurors Mary Miller was a victim of meth addiction and bad taste. "She chose the wrong spouse," Ford said. Attorney James Varner contended Ramsey "wasn't even there" and had been misidentified by a deputy. Moreno's attorney, Kenneth Irvine, argued his client was being prosecuted for buying cold medicine, paint thinner and peroxide. "Buying things that are perfectly legal shouldn't send you to jail," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart