Pubdate: Thu, 01 Apr 2004 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2004 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Matt Stiles, Dallas Morning News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) TIMELINE STILL FUZZY IN FAKE-DRUG CASE Testimony Differs On When DA Raised Concerns Over Evidence More than two years after a series of bogus drug arrests in Dallas, two key players in the district attorney's office and Police Department still don't agree on when prosecutors first expressed concern about the problem, according to recent testimony. Two men who oversaw narcotics officers and prosecutors in the fall of 2001 - when more than two dozen felony drug cases unraveled into a scandal - gave conflicting accounts in recent depositions for a federal lawsuit of when and how the agencies communicated. Transcripts of the depositions, which are not yet public, were recently obtained by The Dallas Morning News. The dispute centers on when Assistant District Attorney Gregg Long, who oversaw drug courts at the time, told Lt. Craig Miller, a narcotics supervisor, that the district attorney's office had concerns about several big cases. Mr. Long testified that his warning came a month before Lt. Miller remembers receiving it. The depositions of Mr. Long and Lt. Miller suggest that, even with intense questioning under oath, the full truth about how top prosecutors and narcotics supervisors dealt with the unraveling of the bad cases in late 2001 remains unclear. Also unclear from the depositions is whether wrongly accused people might have been freed from jail sooner if the agencies had reacted differently. Mr. Long testified that he was concerned because police reports in several cases indicated that narcotics officers who were involved in several busts received positive results for cocaine or methamphetamine using field test kits after the seizures. Subsequent laboratory tests showed that the white, powdery substance actually was billiards chalk with little or no drugs mixed in. In his testimony, Mr. Long said that after he talked to lower-ranking officers in the weeks before, he called Lt. Miller on Oct. 26, 2001. This was almost two months after his office began receiving negative test reports from the Southwestern Institute for Forensic Sciences on drug evidence in the Dallas police cases. Also Online Of note in the deposition of Lt. Craig Miller, a Dallas police narcotics supervisor: A key remaining question in the fake-drug cases is why narcotics officers received false positive results when they tested the fake drugs with their field kits. Lt. Miller said narcotics supervisors realized on Nov. 20, 2001, that inadequate training could be a cause. But the department didn't organize a formal training session on how to properly use the kits until months later, in April 2002, according to Lt. Miller's testimony. Lt. Miller testified that he didn't think the weapons displayed at former Chief Terrell Bolton's news conference on fake drugs on New Year's Eve 2001 were seized in any of the bogus arrests. He said Deputy Chief John Martinez, who heads the narcotics division, asked him to supply guns from the police property room. Don Tittle, a plaintiffs' attorney, queried, "Did you ask why?" and Lt. Miller responded, "Sir, I work in a paramilitary organization. When I'm given an order, I follow it." Mr. Tittle later asked, "Those guns were out there just for show?" Lt. Miller replied, "I was asked to bring them." Lt. Miller said the way narcotics officers filled out a voucher for incremental payments totaling $50,000 to a confidential informant deviated from the normal practice. The informants received money from seized drug funds as rewards for information. Lt. Miller testified that a separate form with a witness signature should have been created for every payment. Lt. Miller didn't supervise the officers at the time they made the payments to the informant. But had he been in charge, and the payment sheet came across his desk, he testified that it would "absolutely" raise questions in his mind. "It's not consistent with [how] the normal one would be done," he said. Informants were required to sign such forms when they received payments from officers. Lt. Miller testified that signatures on payment sheets, supposedly by another confidential informant, didn't appear consistent. "I'm not a handwriting expert; I'll qualify my answer with that. On the surface, these signatures do appear to deviate from one another." Mr. Tittle then asked, "Pretty substantially, don't they?" Lt. Miller replied, "They do." Mr. Tittle asked whether Lt. Miller still had faith in the "integrity and credibility" of Senior Cpl. Mark Delapaz, the officer who made most of the arrests that turned out to be for fake drugs, given what he now knows about the cases. Cpl. Delapaz, who was acquitted of federal charges last year, is on leave from the department pending investigations by the city and a special county prosecutor. Lt. Miller replied, "I believe Mark Delapaz is a fine - was a fine narcotics detective. I don't know the full parameters of what took place prior to my taking over the squad [in October 2001]. Mark Delapaz is the same good character person, in my mind, today that he was then." SOURCE: Dallas Morning News research - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin