Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 Source: Rome News-Tribune (GA) Copyright: 2006 Rome News-Tribune Contact: http://www.romenews-tribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1716 Author: Lauren Gregory, Rome News-Tribune Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Meth+Merchant Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) JUDGE REVISITS 'METH MERCHANT' CASE ACLU Lawyers Call a Man to Testify to Racial Bias After Two John Does Backed Out Earlier in the Week After hearing testimony Thursday morning from a cousin of one of the government informants used in "Operation Meth Merchant," U.S. District Judge Harold L. Murphy said he wants to see more on paper before deciding whether charges against defendants implicated in the investigation should be dropped. Lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union allege racially biased prosecution in the "Meth Merchant" investigation, which resulted in the arrests last summer of 49 Northwest Georgia convenience store owners and operators on charges they knowingly sold ingredients used to make methamphetamines. The ACLU had originally wanted to put two anonymous informants on the witness stand to testify that law enforcement specifically targeted stores owned by South Asians, but both of their John Does had decided to plead the Fifth Amendment by the time a hearing was held Monday. Instead, the defense called a witness Thursday they said could testify to essentially the same information: John Edward Ross of Chickamauga. Ross says he drove his cousin, whom he revealed during the hearing as John A. Ross Jr., to a controlled buy at Famous Market and Tobacco in Flintstone in March 2004. According to John Edward Ross, a special agent with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation told his cousin just before the buy that authorities were "going to close these Indian stores down because they don't speak good English." To talk fast and use slang during the purchase were part of the instructions, Ross said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Tarvin played a recording of the conversation between the agent and informant for Ross, noting there were no such words exchanged on the tape. Ross replied that the remarks were made before the recording device was turned on. Tarvin called into question Ross' recollection of the order of events, asked him about a statement he had made indicating "the system" had mistreated him and introduced evidence showing he had been convicted of burglary and deposit account fraud. She asked Murphy to throw out affidavits provided by the two informants who did not testify, but the judge said he would allow the issue to be argued in briefs before making a final ruling. The affidavits, which include statements alleging that law enforcement ignored information about white-owned stores and specifically instructed informants to go to South Asian-owned stores, were filed in April in support of the ACLU's motion to dismiss charges. Murphy has already denied a separate motion for dismissal but indicated during Thursday's hearing that he agreed to revisit the issue in an abundance of caution. ACLU attorneys did not make any statements at the conclusion of the hearing, but U.S. Attorney David Nahmias relayed through a spokesman his belief that "the motion has no factual or legal merit," adding, "We will be filing the appropriate response as requested by the judge." There are few "Meth Merchant" cases still pending before the court, as according to records at least 10 have been dismissed and an additional 30 individuals have resolved their cases through plea agreements. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake