Pubdate: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2004 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Connie Baggett PRYOR'S OFFICE DROPS DRUG CHARGES AGAINST ATTORNEY Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryor's office announced Thursday that it dropped drug charges filed last fall against an Evergreen attorney. Attorney general spokeswoman Suzanne Webb confirmed Thursday that the charges against Sarah Elizabeth Oswald "Sally" Stoddard were dropped because the evidence was insufficient to proceed. Stoddard's attorney, Paul Harden, said his client was set up. "I think the problem was, from day one, Sally Stoddard was a victim of an overzealous investigator, John Green, who uses felons who will say or do anything to get relief from pending charges of their own." Harden said the attorney general's office discovered "the truth -- that Sally Stoddard had prescriptions for the medications she had." Stoddard, 56, was arrested in October after a three-month investigation, deputies said. Conecuh County Sheriff's Department officers found $1,300 worth of illegal prescription medication in Stoddard's office after a sting operation involving a few of her clients. Investigators said drug buys were tape recorded. Officers last fall said they found several Xanax and 36 Lortab tablets in Stoddard's office and the attorney had no prescriptions for the drugs. Xanax, known generically as alprazolam, is described as highly habit-forming and is prescribed as an anti-anxiety or panic medication. Lortab is the brand name for a mix of hydrocodone, a narcotic painkiller, and acetaminophen, a non-narcotic painkiller. Lortab can be addictive if abused or over-used. Conecuh County District Attorney Tommy Chapman had recused himself from the case here -- standard procedure, he said, when local attorneys are charged in criminal cases. The state attorney general then stepped in to prosecute the case. Conecuh County Sheriff Tracy Hawsey said the state prosecutor chose not to pursue the case against Stoddard "because the evidence against her was not what they wanted." Hawsey said the local investigation remains open, however. Webb declined to elaborate about the attorney general's decision to drop charges. Stoddard was charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance and released on $5,000 bond. The Alabama State Bar Association suspended her license to practice law pending the resolution of the charges. Robert E. Lusk, Assistant General Counsel for the State Bar Association, said Thursday Stoddard's license is suspended and that he is unaware of any imminent reinstatement. He said Stoddard could immediately file a motion to be reinstated with the association's disciplinary board and consideration of the motion could happen in a matter of days. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin