Pubdate: Tue, 26 Sep 2006 Source: Green Bay Press-Gazette (WI) Copyright: 2006 Green Bay Press-Gazette Contact: http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/contact/forms/editor_letter.shtml Website: http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/879 Author: Andy Nelesen, MURDER FOR HIRE TRIAL WILL START TODAY Diaz Fails In Attempt To Fire His Lawyer A 33-year-old man who allegedly tried to hire someone to kill a Brown County narcotics agent and a confidential informant will stand trial today, despite his efforts to fire his lawyer. Leo Manuel Diaz in June pleaded not guilty to two counts of solicitation of first-degree intentional homicide. If convicted on both charges he faces 25 years in prison. At a hearing Monday, Diaz claimed that his lawyer, Eric Pangburn, had a conflict of interest because he represented in an unrelated case a man who Diaz claimed was a witness in an unrelated federal investigation against him. In a discussion with Brown County Circuit Court Judge William Atkinson, Pangburn acknowledged representing the man, but knew nothing of an ongoing federal investigation. Pangburn said his representation of the other man had nothing to do with Diaz's case and didn't see it as a conflict. Atkinson asked Diaz for more information about the alleged federal case, but he was unable to provide specifics. Atkinson ruled that there was not enough information to remove Pangburn from the case and scuttle the jury trial. After Atkinson rejected the move, Diaz asked to have Pangburn fired outright, a move Atkinson also quashed. "This is the same doggone motion I heard two minutes ago," Atkinson said. "I'm not going to allow you to fire him on the eve of trial." According to the felony criminal complaint filed in May, Diaz began talking with another inmate while in the Brown County Jail on a drug case and allegedly said he wanted to have the narcotics agent and the confidential informant who helped build the case killed. Diaz also allegedly told the inmate that he wanted his co-defendant from the drug case killed, but said the drug cartel he worked with would take care of that once the man was deported to Mexico. Diaz said he would pay more for killing a law enforcement officer because "killing a cop was going to bring more heat and be harder to do," the complaint said. During conversations at the jail, Diaz allegedly offered to pay the inmate $5,000 to kill the informant and $10,000 to kill the now-former narcotics agent, a nine-year veteran of the Brown County Sheriff's Department. The agent rotated out of the county's drug unit as part of routine personnel changes. Diaz said he was owed $25,000 in drug debt and promised to set up the other inmate in the drug trade if he went through with the killings, the complaint said. Diaz also offered the inmate a BMW once both men were killed. Drug agents recorded a conversation between Diaz and the inmate where they discussed the offer, but it was in less detail than in previous conversations, according to the complaint. Diaz wrote on a piece of paper "Kill them both. Don't leave any witnesses," and then tore up the paper, according to the complaint. Diaz told the inmate to make a phone call and say "It's a beautiful day" as a signal to indicate both men were killed, the complaint said. Diaz is being held in lieu of $500,000 bail in the murder-for-hire case. The underlying drug case was closed earlier this month when Brown County Circuit Court Judge J.D. McKay sentenced Diaz to five years in prison and four years of release on extended supervision for selling more than 110 pounds of marijuana -- with a street value of more than $170,000 -- in Brown County. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine