Pubdate: Sun, 04 Mar 2007 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2007 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Sam Roberts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) CRIME'S 'MR. UNTOUCHABLE' EMERGES FROM SHADOWS The 74-year-old man who used to be Leroy Nicholas Barnes, owner of 60 pairs of custom-made shoes, 27 full-length leather coats and more than one Mercedes-Benz, wears baggy Lee dungarees these days and drives to work in a used car he bought five years ago. With his slight limp and mostly bald pate, he seems the antithesis of his former persona as Mr. Untouchable, the dashing Harlem heroin dealer who posed 30 years ago on a magazine cover in a blue denim suit and a red, white and blue tie. Mr. Barnes's posture of smug invulnerability so affronted President Jimmy Carter that he ordered his attorney general to, as they say, prosecute Mr. Barnes to the fullest extent of the law. The Justice Department did just that. And in 1977, Mr. Barnes - a former addict with a junior high education who made a fortune flooding black neighborhoods with heroin and swaggered around as an invincible outlaw - was sentenced to life in prison without parole. "He was the No. 1; he had charisma," said Sterling Johnson Jr., a federal judge and former special narcotics prosecutor in New York City. "Have you been in the presence of Bill Clinton when he walks down the street? That was Nicky Barnes." While Mr. Barnes, widely known as Nicky, languished behind bars, though, his former cronies, his wife and his girlfriends began cavorting, he said, squandering the criminal enterprise that had made them all millionaires. So much for honor among thieves. Mr. Barnes felt betrayed. "They had a sleeping lion, a caged lion," he recalled, "and they woke him up." And so Mr. Barnes roared, so ferocious a government witness that scores of drug dealers were convicted. He was released into the federal witness protection program in 1998. And then he disappeared. Years ago, a former associate predicted how difficult it would be for Mr. Barnes to adjust to a life of anonymity if he ever turned informer and was granted a fresh identity. "If he runs a Laundromat in Dubuque or a grocery store in Slippery Rock, that's one thing," the associate said. "But the man has a tremendous amount of charisma and intelligence. I don't think he's going to be innocuous anywhere." For nearly a decade, though, Mr. Barnes says, he has managed to seamlessly insinuate himself into mainstream America, this time untouchable by those he incriminated and the friends and families of foes he murdered. "A lot of people think I'm dead," he says. "The anonymity that cloaks middle America is the life I'm comfortable with, and what I want to be." Last weekend, though, Mr. Barnes surfaced briefly, and pseudonymously, to promote a new book about his old life in the feral 1970s, "Mr. Untouchable," written with Tom Folsom. This summer, he will appear in a documentary with the same name and later this year a movie, "American Gangster," is to be released. It stars Cuba Gooding Jr. as Mr. Barnes, but, to his exasperation, focuses on his chief rival in Harlem's heroin trade, Frank Lucas. The dapper Nicky Barnes that audiences will see bears little resemblance to the man he says he has become, a grandfather who puts in solid 40-hour weeks at an undisclosed job, who lives in a white neighborhood in an undisclosed state, and who matter-of-factly takes home doggie bags from restaurants. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek