Pubdate: Sun, 26 Mar 2006
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2006 The Baltimore Sun, a Times Mirror Newspaper
Contact:  http://www.baltimoresun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Author: Matthew Dolan, Sun Reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States)

CASE AGAINST OFFICERS RESTS ON WIRETAPS

Prosecutors Say Calls Show Drug Dealing, Police Corruption

The indicted police officers sit in federal court every day but have 
never spoken to the men and women who will decide their fates.

For two weeks, detectives William A. King and Antonio L. Murray have 
watched silently as jurors absorbed hour upon hour of the officers' 
conversations that were secretly recorded by the FBI.

Federal prosecutors say wiretaps show how King and Murray 
masterminded an illegal drug-dealing operation, nicknamed "grinding," 
that targeted old and addled addicts in West Baltimore. Often, 
according to the tapes, the officers "grinded" before or after their 
regular shifts, calling it their real work.

"You should have been like, yo, you know how King is," King told one 
man he stopped for drug dealing in March last year and later robbed, 
according to authorities. "He took my [expletive] drugs and he took 
my money, told me to get the [expletive] out of here."

This week, their attorneys say, King and Murray will have a chance to 
fight back when they take the witness stand.

But to do so, the officers will need to overcome a withering picture 
of police corruption assembled by prosecutors that draws from the 
officers' informants who became federal witnesses, gel capsules full 
of heroin seized from the officers' car and bank records showing 
unusually large cash deposits - a trademark of a drug dealer, 
according to prosecutors.

The strength of the government's case has been the hundreds, if not 
thousands, of the officers' conversations. They reveal moments both 
mundane and monstrous, federal prosecutors say.

One call between the partners Feb. 17, 2005, was fairly typical. It 
captured both staccato banter between them and the shorthand 
references that federal agents said the officers used to complete 
their drug deals. A partial transcript said:

Murray: That was like 60 some pieces, wasn't it?

King: That [expletive] sitting in the car somewhere. Middle console.

Murray: It's in the brown paper bag. Don't leave it in there.

King: I don't know what you're talking about.

Murray: Yo, we went in the house, you found like you said it was like 
60 pieces. It was in a brown paper bag. Where is it?

King: I told you I put everything in that middle console.

The conversations are not evidence of a criminal enterprise, the 
officer's lawyers argue. Instead, attorneys Edward Smith Jr. and 
Russell A. Neverdon Sr. said that the snippets are raw talk from 
undercover officers simply doing their job - a demanding one that 
required them to bend the rules and adopt new, aggressive tactics, 
some taught by policing experts from New York.

But King and Murray were more than aggressive, according to 
prosecutors. For more than six months before their arrests in May 
2005, the officers are accused of rounding up drug suspects and 
holding them in cars, robbing and threatening them with force, arrest 
and prosecution.

Later, the two police officers and their lookout, Antonio Mosby, 
split the proceeds from the robberies and sold the drugs they seized 
for profit, according to court testimony.

For more than a decade, King and Murray followed remarkably similar 
paths. They both graduated from high school in Baltimore and joined 
the city Police Department in 1992. They spent time in the Central 
District, the Criminal Intelligence Section and a specialized unit 
that swarmed over high-crime areas in the city.

In December 2004, when the Police Department assumed responsibility 
for patrolling Baltimore's public housing communities, King and 
Murray joined the new unit.

However parallel their careers, a review of almost 700 pages of 
transcripts of the tapes by The Sun shows the officers' different 
personalities. Murray comes across as high-strung and aggressive. 
Records show he amassed a large amount of cash in his bank accounts, 
and part of the tapes deal with his purchase of a new Infiniti.

In contrast, King is laconic. His answers are short and often without 
detail. He seems to let his guard down a little when talking to 
Mosby, whom he used to drink with in his off-hours.

The frustration both officers shared about Mosby, an admitted heroin 
addict, led to one of the trial's more humorous moments when 
prosecutors played a conversation from Feb. 17, 2005. In it, Murray 
is convinced that Mosby is trying to con the officers by getting them 
to front him drugs allegedly stolen without paying for them first.

Murray: What he think, we're super dummies?

King: Yeah.

Murray: Huh?

King: Yep.

Murray: Seriously.

King: Yeah, for real.

The conversation continues, but Murray appears obsessed with idea of 
"super dummies."

Murray: I'm dumb, [slight laugh] but I ain't no super super dummy.

King appeared to have more affection for Mosby, who returned the 
feeling. Playful and teasing, the two appeared to box out Murray at 
times, including one phone call April 8, 2005:

King: During the daytime, but in the morning before we hit Tony 
[Murray], even if we could, just get, go get stashes yo. You know 
what I'm sayin'?

Mosby: Yeah, for real yo.

King: You know we get ... I'm trying to make something from it too 
[expletive]. You just want me to give everything to you.

Mosby: No, no, no, no, no, yo. We go fifty-fifty yo. Fifty-fifty.

King: All right. Well that's what's up then.

Mosby wasn't King and Murray's only source on the street. The FBI and 
prosecutors argue that King used others, including government witness 
Dion Snipe, who were detained and then set free to sell "packs" of 
drugs on the street and share in the profits.

At 9:52 p.m. May 9, 2005, King and Snipe allegedly talked about one 
of their last deals:

Snipe: We trying to get a couple of dollars in our pockets, right?

King: Yo, it's [expletive] 10 o'clock!

Snipe: Hmph?

King: It's 10 o'clock. Time I get off ...

Snipe: What does that mean?

King: I ain't at work no more!

Snipe: Oh, so you're off?

King: Yeah.

Snipe: I thought you said you work till 1 o'clock tonight?

King: No, I did not. I said 10.

Snipe: Oh man, oh [expletive].

King: What, what was up?

Snipe: Damn. Remember, when I tell you about the people sitting on the steps.

King: Yeah.

Snipe: Two packs in there, right.

King: Say what?

Snipe: Two packs and I think like maybe 300 dollars. We can split that, right?

King: Damn, I'm off, yo. Tomorrow we can do that though, definitively.

Two days later, the FBI arrested King and Murray.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman