Pubdate: Fri, 30 Sep 2005 Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX) Copyright: 2005 Austin American-Statesman Contact: http://www.statesman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/32 Author: Sarah Coppola DEAL ENDS POLICE 'MALA SANGRE' WHISTLE-BLOWER LAWSUITS Austin To Pay $200,000 In Case; Officer Said He Was Transferred For Accusing Assistant Chief Of Interfering With Investigation The City of Austin will pay $200,000 to settle a whistle-blower lawsuit with an Austin police officer, ending one of the department's most notorious sagas in recent memory. Officer Jeff White accused former Assistant Chief Jimmy Chapman of having him transferred after White told an internal affairs investigator that Chapman had interfered in aspects of a drug-trafficking investigation. The mid-1990s investigation - code-named Mala Sangre, or Bad Blood - was led by federal agents with the help of local officers. It turned up leads that some Austin officers might have been protecting and assisting drug dealers and using cocaine on duty. None of the officers was prosecuted. On Thursday, the City Council unanimously agreed to settle the case for $200,000: $100,000 for White and $100,000 for his lawyer, Don Feare. Neither Feare nor White could be reached for comment Thursday. The settlement does not come with any admission of guilt by city officials, who all along have said the matter was fully investigated and that the department and Chapman did nothing wrong. Four other officers filed two lawsuits related to Mala Sangre; the city settled those cases in 2000 for $6,000 and $80,000. "Each case was analyzed separately, and the settlement amounts are based on the unique facts and circumstances of each case," City Attorney David Smith said. Smith said that city officials and White, who still works for the department, have agreed not to discuss details of the case or assign any blame as part of the settlement. White sued in 2002 after he was transferred from a job in narcotics. He said he was also blocked from other assignments. In a deposition, Chapman testified that White was moved because of poor work performance, though work evaluations showed White received high marks. The other four officers alleged in their lawsuits that they were transferred off the Mala Sangre task force to stymie the investigation into possible wrongdoing by fellow officers. White became the only officer assigned to the task force when the others left. As a result, he said, he was "set up for failure" because of the large caseload. Feare deposed several city officials, including Police Chief Stan Knee and City Manager Toby Futrell. The city police union, often at odds with city officials, made public some of the more scintillating details of the depositions, which led, in part, to an independent investigation of Chapman. Other officers said Chapman had demanded that phone records be removed from an internal affairs file, which Chapman denied under oath. Chapman also testified that he wasn't aware that White would be transferred, although another officer said Chapman knew of the move. Chapman retired in 2003, shortly after an independent investigator ruled that the allegations against Chapman were inconclusive. The Mala Sangre operation led to 20 arrests across the United States, include retired Austin police officer Bob Black and the man accused of running the drug operation, Roger Lopez. Black was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison for buying cocaine, and Lopez got seven years for drug trafficking. But internal affairs officers testified that they never had a chance to fully examine the matter because management-level officers quashed their efforts. Austin Police Association President Mike Sheffield said Thursday that he is glad the lawsuit is over for White's sake but that "city management is still in denial about Mala Sangre." Sheffield said the city stopped the independent investigation before all the witnesses had been interviewed and all leads examined. "Had that been done, I think we would've been a lot closer to the truth than we are today," Sheffield said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman