Pubdate: Fri, 10 Sep 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 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) FIGHT BREWS OVER HOUSE FEDS SEIZED IN DRUG CASE Sides Disagree About Role Of Late Resident In a case that netted the federal government some $10 million in seized assets, a battle is brewing over a 49-year-old, two-bedroom house in a modest East Knoxville neighborhood. Regina Sawyer contends her late mother was a sainted caregiver who had no clue her Selma Avenue house had been purchased with drug money. The U.S. Attorney's Office counters that the late Linda Sue Sawyer was a willing participant in a scheme to help prolific cocaine trafficker Ronnie "Goodie" Rodgers hide the proceeds of his illegal trade. Regina Sawyer told U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Phillips at a hearing Thursday that she should be awarded her late mother's house. Assistant U.S. Attorney Trey Hamilton insisted the house belongs to the federal government. The house was one of more than a half-dozen properties seized by federal authorities in the probe of a Miami-to-Knoxville cocaine trafficking conspiracy headed in Knoxville by Rodgers and his brothers and led in Miami by Alexis Munoz. Linda Sawyer was Rodgers' sister. When Munoz and the Rodgers brothers were indicted two years ago in a conspiracy indictment, Linda Sawyer also was charged. She was labeled in the indictment as a conspirator not in the drug dealing but in money laundering. In 2003, less than a year after she was indicted, Linda Sawyer died. She was 57. Since then, the Rodgers brothers, Munoz and a list of lower-level players in a trafficking network described as one of Knoxville's largest ever have pleaded guilty. They agreed to give up millions in cash and assets bought with drug money, including pricey Miami condominiums, Florida real estate and more than $200,000 in Knoxville property, including the Selma Avenue house now at issue. Of the properties seized, the Selma Avenue house is the least valuable. Federal authorities estimate its worth at $90,000. The Knox County Property Assessor's Office has valued it at $59,100. Hamilton insisted the battle over the roughly 1,400-square-foot structure is not about money but principle. Linda Sawyer knew her brothers were drug dealers and helped them hide their ill-gotten gains, he argued. Linda Sawyer's niece, Lekisha Perez, testified Thursday that her aunt was illiterate but hard working, operating a day care and serving as a caregiver. "She took care of everybody," Perez said. "We didn't go to the grocery store. We shopped out of her freezer." She conceded Rodgers gave Linda Sawyer the Selma Avenue house, but she insisted her aunt wound up paying Rodgers for the property because she "didn't want to be a freeloader." Hamilton asked if she could prove that. "Documentation, as far as paperwork?" she responded. "No I honestly believe that she purchased this home as an upright citizen. I don't think she knew of any illegal dealings." Sure, she said, Linda Sawyer and others in the family knew at least one of the Rodgers brothers had a drug problem. But no one talked about it. "They really never called its name," she said. "I'm calling its name. That's (drug use) what it was." Phillips suspended the hearing until Wednesday, Sept. 15, so Rodgers and one of his brothers can be transported from jail to the federal courthouse to testify. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin