Pubdate: Thu, 19 Feb 2004 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2004 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: David Ashenfelter, Free Press Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm ( Corruption - United States) DRUG DEALER TELLS COURT THAT COPS LACKED WARRANT Trial Is Under Way in Detroit Police Probe A small-time drug dealer said in federal court Wednesday that two Detroit police officers burst into his home without a warrant, falsified reports and lied in court, causing him to be convicted on bogus criminal charges. "Officer Robo and Timothy Gilbert deliberately lied about me, busted up my house, searching me and arresting me," Bruce Toney, 45, of Detroit, told jurors on the second day of testimony in a trial for eight Detroit police officers. They are accused of violating the rights of alleged pimps, prostitutes and drug dealers in southwest Detroit from 2000 to 2002. Prosecutors say Officer William Melendez, known on the street as Robo Cop, was a ringleader in a conspiracy to violate people's civil rights. The eight officers have pleaded not guilty. Toney, who was freed from prison in December after other police officers contradicted Melendez's and Gilbert's account of what happened, spent two hours on the witness stand Wednesday. He said he sold crack at the home in the 200 block of Bayside. On the night of Nov. 18, 2001, two people were inside smoking crack when Melendez and Gilbert banged on his door and demanded at gunpoint that he let them in. Toney, who had stuffed his cocaine supply in the couch, said officers demanded to know where he kept his drugs. He said Melendez told him he would fabricate drug and gun charges against Toney if he didn't show them where his drugs were hidden. Toney said several other officers showed up during the search. Eventually, officers found the drugs and a .22-caliber handgun. In the end, Melendez and Gilbert filed police reports and testified in district and circuit courts that Toney was leaving his house when they pulled up in response to a radio run that men with guns were trying to drag two women into Toney's home. Prosecutors say Melendez and Gilbert had another officer call in the 911 abduction report to justify their presence at Toney's home. Melendez and Gilbert testified at Toney's criminal trial that they patted Toney down outside his home and found a loaded .22-caliber pistol and cocaine. They said they never went inside. A Wayne County Circuit Court jury convicted Toney in 2002 of drug and firearm charges, resulting in a 29-month prison sentence. During cross-examination by James Howarth and David Lee, the lawyers for Gilbert and Melendez, Toney admitted lying at his criminal trial. But Toney insisted he was telling the truth in Wednesday's testimony. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake