Pubdate: Sat, 09 Oct 2004 Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Copyright: 2004 Lexington Herald-Leader Contact: http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240 Author: Bill Estep LEGAL CHALLENGE THREATENS DRUG CASES Lawyer Says Task Force Paperwork Is Faulty A legal challenge to the authority of some drug detectives in southern Kentucky raises the threat of charges being dismissed in numerous cases. The issue centers on whether Operation UNITE properly filed the agreement under which local officers work as part of the federally funded multi-county task force. McKee attorney Sharon K. Allen has argued that UNITE officers did not have jurisdiction to investigate cases in Jackson County or arrest a woman she represents, in part because the agency filed its operating agreement with the county in the wrong courthouse office. The challenge could snowball throughout the 10 other counties in UNITE's Cumberland Area Task Force and, depending on court rulings, affect the outcome of hundreds of charges. The counties in the Cumberland region are Bell, Clay, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, McCreary, Pulaski, Rockcastle, Wayne and Whitley. "There very well could be a lot of cases and/or charges dismissed," Allen said. UNITE could not say yesterday how many arrests it has made in the Cumberland region this year. Circuit Judge R. Cletus Maricle heard initial arguments on the challenge to the UNITE cases Tuesday. Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Richie Couch argued that the officers had authority to make arrests in Jackson County. Maricle did not issue an immediate ruling. The judge scheduled another hearing Dec. 7 in order to give attorneys time to submit written arguments. UNITE will file a brief or work with the prosecution on its argument and will vigorously defend its operations, said London attorney Tom Jensen, who represents the program. UNITE stands for Unlawful Narcotics Investigation, Treatment and Education. As the name indicates, the program has three pieces: increased investigation of street-level drug sales, treatment for addicts, and expanded education to prevent drug abuse. U.S. Rep. Harold "Hal" Rogers, reacting to what he called an epidemic of drug abuse, addiction and death, got $8 million in federal funding to start the program in 2003 and another $8 million this year. UNITE officers started making cases in January and have since arrested more than 400 people, including more than 200 in one roundup -- one of the largest in state history -- in April in the Hazard area. The detectives making undercover drug buys for UNITE are employees of local police and sheriff's departments who work for the regional task forces under an agreement between the federally funded agency and local government. The agreement is designed to allow officers from one county in the task force to work cases throughout the region, so UNITE can shift officers as needed for investigations and bring in police unknown to local drug dealers to make undercover buys. That agreement, key to the challenge that has come up, becomes effective only after several steps have been completed, including having the county judge sign the deal after authorization by the fiscal court, and filing a certified copy of the agreement with the Kentucky secretary of state and the county clerk. In Jackson County, UNITE filed the agreement in the circuit clerk's office, Allen said, not in the county clerk's office. That means the agreement was not valid so officers from elsewhere had no jurisdiction to conduct investigations in Jackson County, Allen argues. The issue might appear to be a technicality, but it is a serious question about constitutional rights and whether UNITE followed the law, Allen said. Allen said police from the cities of Manchester, London, Cumberland and the sheriff's departments in Laurel and Rockcastle counties participated in the case against her client, Trish Singleton. Singleton, 38, was charged with selling prescription drugs to informants twice and with possessing drugs with intent to sell. Allen has raised other challenges to the case against Singleton, including that UNITE started investigating Singleton before filing a copy of the operating agreement in Frankfort. Allen also has argued that, because the agreement involves 11 counties under one task force umbrella, if it wasn't valid in one it wasn't valid in any. Attorneys representing several other drug defendants in Jackson County have joined Allen's motion. It's likely that defense attorneys will file similar challenges in UNITE cases in the rest of the Cumberland region, and perhaps look into potential similar challenges in the other UNITE regions. "It's going to be a lot of litigation," Allen said. Judges could rule that UNITE was in substantial compliance with the law, sparing its cases, but defense attorneys would probably appeal. If judges agree with defense attorneys, it could mean whole cases would be dismissed, or individual charges within cases, depending on the facts, Allen said. Jensen said UNITE is researching the issue and checking the agreements it filed. There does not appear to be a problem with the paperwork filed in counties in the Kentucky River and Big Sandy task force areas, Jensen said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin