Pubdate: Sat, 13 Aug 2005 Source: Advocate, The (LA) Copyright: 2005 The Advocate, Capital City Press Contact: http://www.2theadvocate.com/help/letter2editor.shtml Website: http://www.theadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2 Author: Sonya Kimbrell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) EX-CLASSMATE OF DEVAI'S RECALLS SMART, WITTY PERSON A former classmate remembers a smart and quiet but witty young man in Gergely Garry Devai, who police say shot and killed Detective Terry Melancon, 31, and wounded detectives Dennis Smith, 41, and Neal Noel, 35. The narcotics officers were attempting to search Devai's Capital Heights duplex Wednesday because police suspected he was selling marijuana. Devai started shooting after Melancon and the others entered his duplex, police have said. At least one officer returned fire, and Devai was hit twice in the abdomen and once in the arm. East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner Shannon Cooper said an autopsy performed Thursday showed Devai bled to death from the two gunshot wounds in his abdomen. "Sometimes people with these kinds of injuries you can save, but more frequently you can't," Cooper said. "There are a lot of things that can be damaged in the abdomen." Police and witnesses said Devai was arrested and handcuffed shortly after the shooting and held in the front yard of his duplex until he was taken by ambulance to Baton Rouge General Medical Center-Mid City. He died at the hospital about an hour later, said Sgt. Don Kelly, a spokesman for the Baton Rouge Police Department. Devai's body was cremated Friday, said Don Moreau, chief of operations for the East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner's Office. Moreau said Devai's mother released his remains to the Coroner's Office as an indigent because she was unable to pay for a burial. Cremation is the method the Coroner's Office uses to handle indigent cases. Devai's ashes will be returned to his next-of-kin next week, Moreau said. Nobody answered the door Friday at the address listed as the home of Devai's parents. Police said Thursday that during a search of Devai's duplex they found 72 marijuana plants, 60 plastic bags filled with marijuana ready to sell, scales and other drug paraphernalia, cash and two guns "He was never a problem. He was the kind of guy who sat in the back of the classroom and made straight A's. Everybody liked him," said Rosana Sotile Weaver of Leesville who attended both McKinley Middle School and Baton Rouge Magnet High School with Devai. Records found in The Advocate archives show that Devai, who was usually called Garry, was a TIP scholar in 1993. TIP, Duke University's Talent Identification Program, honors outstanding seventh-grade students. It identifies students in 16 states who have scored in the top 3 percent on either the SAT or ACT college entrance exams. Devai, formerly of Debrecen, Hungary, apparently moved to Baton Rouge more than a decade ago when his father joined the faculty at LSU. Weaver remembers that Devai spoke English with a Hungarian accent when he first started school with her in the sixth grade. "By the time we graduated, he had lost the accent almost completely. You could only hear it with a couple of words," Weaver said. Devai and Weaver both graduated high school in 1998. The 1997 Baton Rouge High yearbook shows that, as a junior, Devai belonged to the chess club and was a member of the student government association. His senior year he was in the National Honor Society, the International Cultural Awareness Club and the Junior Classical League. He earned a degree in business from LSU in 2003, and records show he also attended New York University. Weaver said she still ran into Devai occasionally when they both attended LSU, and the two worked together as pages at the Bluebonnet Branch Library in 2000 and 2001. Bluebonnet librarian Kay Yerger said a page's duty is to shelve books. There is a huge turnover among the page staff, but she said she recognized Devai's name in news reports about the shootings. However, she said, she remembers little about him. "He was a quiet boy. It's tragic," Yerger said. Weaver said she saw Devai smoke marijuana while they were both students at LSU, but his drug use didn't seem to be more than experimental. "He had a reputation for being kind of a pothead, but nothing that would have ever made him resort to this kind of violence," she said. "This is just really shocking." The Advocate found no prior narcotics convictions for Devai in a search of East Baton Rouge Parish records, though he was facing a misdemeanor after being accused of brandishing a weapon nearly a year ago. A neighbor, Mike Brady, has said that Devai seemed like a "nice guy" and that he seemed devoted to his dogs. East Baton Rouge Parish Animal Control took five dogs belonging to Devai on Wednesday, Director Hilton Cole said. The dogs were released to the custody of Animal Control by Devai's mother on Friday, Cole said. There are two female Rottweilers, one male Labrador mix and two Lab-mix puppies. Cole said one of the adult Rottweilers appears to be the mother of the puppies that are roughly 3 months old. "Right now, they appear healthy," Cole said. "The adults aren't particularly friendly but anytime you bring an animal into a shelter there is an adjustment." He said the puppies seem to be clear of parvovirus, an acute inflammation of the intestines, which is often fatal to puppies and kittens. The puppies are being housed together in a cage with other puppies. The adult dogs seemed intimidated and subdued and one shows almost no body language. None barked when approached. "They're without their master," Cole said. They'll feed the puppies and dogs for several days and then will check their temperaments to see if they are adoptable, he said. Cole said in situations such as these, it's difficult to know whether the animals were bred and trained to be aggressive. And although he doesn't want to malign a breed, Cole said, it's a fact that he sees many Rottweilers -- along with pit bulls -- seized after drug busts. They are "drug dogs," he said, meaning that drug dealers often acquire these dogs for their natural tendencies and train them to be mean and aggressive. "It's pretty sobering to make a decision like this because we realize the animals are innocent, but we don't know how they were trained. We'll just wait. It depends on the dogs," Cole said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin