Pubdate: Sun, 23 Oct 2005
Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY)
510230446
Copyright: 2005 The Courier-Journal
Contact:  http://www.courier-journal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97
Note: Only publishes local LTEs
Author: Kay Stewart

WIRETAP RULING COULD FREE 12 DRUG SUSPECTS

After wiretapping two of his cell phones and recording thousands of 
conversations, federal authorities charged Reggie Rice with heading a 
major drug-conspiracy operation in Louisville.

The seized evidence was startling -- nearly 50 pounds of cocaine with 
a street value of more than $2 million, expensive gold and diamond 
jewelry, $250,000 and loaded assault weapons.

But Rice, 32, and his 11 co-defendants -- who all face charges that 
carry possible life sentences -- might soon go free because a judge 
has ruled that the wiretaps weren't justified and can't be used in court.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Russell's ruling this month is believed to 
be the first time a federal judge in Kentucky has suppressed evidence 
gained from wiretaps, one of law enforcement's most intrusive and 
regulated investigative techniques.

Although the case is significant and the government's motives 
understandable, Russell wrote, "despite the consequences, the court 
must apply the law as written, in good faith and in its intended manner."

Russell said that agents with a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration 
drug task force failed to seriously consider or attempt less 
intrusive investigative methods before they tapped Rice's phones, in 
violation of federal law.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Philip Chance wouldn't comment on Russell's 
ruling, which came in response to a defense motion. But Chance argued 
during a prior hearing that the wiretap was appropriate and necessary.

Chance said a decision will be made whether to appeal Russell's 
ruling. He acknowledged the case is "heavily reliant" on wiretap 
evidence but said prosecutors are considering what charges would be 
possible without it.

A Significant Case

The ruling comes in a case that is significant because of the large 
amount of cocaine involved, plus the fact that several defendants, 
including Rice, have long arrest records and previous drug 
convictions, Chance said.

All 12 defendants are charged with conspiracy to traffic in 15 to 50 
kilograms -- 33 to 110 pounds -- of cocaine from June to August 2004 
in a federal indictment that says Rice organized and led the 
enterprise. Rice and three of the other defendants also face 
additional charges related to drug activities.

The drug-conspiracy charge against all the defendants carries a 
maximum penalty of life in prison.

They have all pleaded not guilty to the charges.

A Known Drug Dealer

Rice, whose phones were tapped from June 23 to Aug. 7 of last year, 
was a known drug dealer, based on comments from defense lawyers, 
Russell said in his ruling suppressing the evidence.

But the judge said the wiretap was illegal because it was the first 
step law-enforcement officers took in their investigation into his 
alleged drug dealing.

Before resorting to wiretaps, the law says other investigative 
methods -- such as physical surveillance, confidential informants, 
search warrants, grand jury testimony and searching suspects' trash 
- -- should be attempted or rejected as ineffective or too dangerous, 
the ruling said.

"Other than some uncorroborated thoughts and opinions, there is no 
evidence that any other investigative technique was ever used or even 
seriously considered," Russell wrote.

The judge said in his 27-page opinion that the 40-page affidavit 
submitted by an FBI agent and approved by Chief U.S. District Judge 
John Heyburn II authorizing the wiretap was misleading and lacked 
specifics relating to the Rice inquiry.

Russell said the affidavit included six pages under the heading 
"Alternative Investigative Procedures."

It said surveillance had been conducted with minimal results that 
identified locations and vehicles they used. The affidavit also said 
surveillance posed an unreasonable danger for law enforcement because 
members of the drug organization have violent histories and 
"routinely carry firearms and wear bullet-resistant vests."

Russell said those statements would prompt a reasonable judge to 
conclude that Rice had been under physical surveillance. But 
testimony at a hearing in the case revealed that was not the case, he said.

"Assertions made in the affidavit about physical surveillance," the 
judge wrote, "are simply put, misleading."

Statements about the dangers of the surveillance "are equally 
unavailing," the ruling said.

The affidavit also said efforts to use a confidential informant were 
not successful, the judge noted, but there was no effort to cultivate 
a source relating to Rice.

Another Drug Case

The surveillance cited in the affidavit actually was used in an 
investigation of another suspected drug dealer, Shawn Bullitt, 25, 
whose cell phone had been tapped a month before officers got 
permission to record conversations on Rice's phone, the judge's ruling said.

Bullitt was indicted separately, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to 
distribute crack cocaine and possession of cocaine, and was sentenced 
last month to eight years and two months in prison, according to court records.

Investigators sought a wiretap on Rice's phone after Rice called 
Bullitt's tapped phone on June 13, 2004, and was overheard expressing 
an interest in a cocaine shipment that Bullitt said was too much for 
him to handle, according to the judge's ruling.

In a brief he filed with the court, Chance said 4,280 conversations 
were intercepted on one of Rice's phones from June 23 to Aug. 7. A 
second cell phone under a wiretap from July 21 to Aug. 7 generated 38 calls.

Rice and seven other defendants have been in jail pending the outcome 
of the case. Judge Russell has scheduled a telephone status conference Nov. 30.

Crucial Evidence

Defense attorney Keith Kamenish, a former assistant Jefferson 
commonwealth's attorney, said that without the wiretap evidence, he 
believes the charges will be dismissed and the defendants released.

"I think they wouldn't have evidence that is not related to the 
wiretap," he said.

Frank Mascagni, another defense lawyer in the case and a former 
assistant commonwealth's attorney, said he was unaware of any 
evidence not based on wiretaps. "I don't think it's a home run 
automatically, but my sense of it is it's damn close."

Rice's lawyer, former federal prosecutor Scott Cox, wouldn't comment 
on the ruling.

Rice has a long arrest record, including a murder charge in 1997 in a 
drive-by shooting and three drug-trafficking charges in state court. 
But he has only one felony conviction -- a 1996 charge for cocaine 
possession resulting in a one-year prison sentence, records show.

In addition to the drug-conspiracy charge, Rice and two other 
defendants -- brothers Jose Alfredo Jimenez-Huerta and German Jose 
Jimenez-Huerta of Ohio, who are in the country illegally from Mexico 
- -- are charged with one count of possessing 48 pounds of cocaine, 
according to court records. Rice also is charged, along with 
defendant Terrell Gray, with firearms violations.

The Arrests

Law enforcement officers arrested Rice and the Jimenez-Huerta 
brothers on Aug. 7, 2004, after obtaining information that Rice 
planned to buy cocaine from the two at a McDonald's restaurant near 
Preston Highway, according to testimony at Rice's detention hearing 
after their arrests.

Using drug dogs, law enforcement officers found 44 pounds of cocaine 
in the door panels of a Honda occupied by the brothers near the site, 
according to testimony.

In carrying out search warrants, police also found another 41/2 
pounds of cocaine in Rice's basement living quarters at his mother's 
home on Unseld Boulevard in Newburg, according to the testimony.

The cocaine, weapons, ammunition, and more than $230,000 were found 
behind a false wall in a hidden compartment, according to testimony. 
Police also seized $3,000 from Rice's girlfriend's home, according to testimony.
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