Pubdate: Fri, 30 May 2008 Source: Times-Picayune, The (New Orleans, LA) Copyright: 2008 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Laura Maggi COP'S ARREST TAINTS DRUG CASES DA Drops Charges in 37 Prosecutions As a member of the New Orleans Police Department's 4th District task force, officer Joseph Lusk was involved in a plethora of Algiers drug busts, arresting people for dealing or using illegal drugs. Lusk's own arrest last month on suspicion of malfeasance in office means 37 of those cases have been dropped so far by the Orleans Parish district attorney's office -- whose prosecutors can't press forward on cases with an allegedly corrupt cop as a main witness. Each case needed to be evaluated to determine whether Lusk was an "essential witness," or whether prosecutors could go forward without his testimony, relying on other NOPD officers, said District Attorney Keva Landrum-Johnson. Almost all of the cases involve drugs -- save for the battery of a police officer charge in which Lusk was the alleged victim, an office spokesman said. "Once an officer is under investigation of any sort, we wouldn't want to call him to testify for us," Landrum-Johnson said. Arrested April 16 Lusk was arrested by his department's Public Integrity Bureau on April 16 amid allegations he tipped off a woman about a drug location under surveillance on the West Bank. This female acquaintance, Inger Hurst, allegedly told 4th District officers about the text-messaged tip-off -- which Hurst said was meant to help her evade arrest for her drug purchases -- when she was picked up the next day on suspicion of crack possession. Lusk, who resigned from the NOPD the week of Hurst's arrest, was booked the following week with malfeasance. The DA's office expects to present his case to a grand jury next month, said Robert White, the assistant district attorney in charge of the office's public corruption unit. Challenging Police Version Lusk's attorney, Frank DeSalvo, has challenged the police version of what happened between Hurst and Lusk, saying the officer can explain what happened. To some observers of the criminal justice system, Lusk's case demonstrates the ripple effect of police officers who are subsequently busted for wrongdoing, even before they are convicted of any offense. "It goes much deeper than the damage that is done in the mind and eyes of the public, in undermining the public's confidence in the criminal justice system," said Rafael Goyeneche, president of the Metropolitan Crime Commission. In addition to the pending cases, prosecutors should expect defendants convicted on the basis of Lusk's testimony to file appeals, Goyeneche said. "They have new evidence that an essential state witness is untrustworthy," he said. Although Lusk was often out on patrol with a partner, prosecutors sometimes decided to drop the case if Lusk was the only one to perform a key task, such as depositing seized drugs in the police evidence room, Landrum-Johnson said. During a trial, prosecutors need to be able to put on the stand the officer who handled the evidence collection in order to establish the chain of custody, she said. "It is not just what happened on the scene," Landrum-Johnson said. "We have to look at it from the very beginning to the end." Dropping Drug Cases In one case that was dropped, Lusk and his partner, officer Brian Sullivan, arrested two men on Newton Street after watching a "hand-to-hand" crack sale in early March, according to a brief police report in the court file. When the officers approached the pair, Sullivan reached into the right-front pocket of Larry Robinson, 42, finding one crack rock. Lusk frisked Terry Ealy, 18, discovering eight rocks and $10, according to the report. Last week, the district attorney's office released Ealy from the charge of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, while still moving forward with the prosecution of Robinson. A defendant in another case, Albert Washington, was about to plead guilty to drug charges in order to get into drug court when the district attorney dropped the case because of Lusk's involvement, said John Fuller, his attorney. But Fuller applauded the DA for not moving forward with a tainted police witness. "I think the DA office's hands were tied on this one," he said. Raising New Questions Defense attorney Harry Tervalon said he raised questions about a Lusk investigation into the bust of three people for drug dealing even before the officer was arrested. Lusk was tipped off by a "concerned citizen" that drug dealing was going on at a house on Teche Street and set up surveillance himself, writing in a police report that he watched four drug transactions, Tervalon said. The officer filed a report detailing the time of these sales, including one at 9:35 p.m. But according to the time notation on a search warrant Lusk obtained that same evening in May 2007, at 9:40 p.m. he met with a magistrate commissioner to obtain the warrant to search the house, Tervalon said. Two men and a woman were arrested that night, including Tervalon's client, Patrick Canty. All were charged with possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine and marijuana. Tervalon said he raised questions during a hearing held several weeks before Lusk's own arrest about whether the officer's testimony could be believed. "The search warrant was signed at an impossible time, according to the police report," said Tervalon, a former police officer himself. After the officer's arrest, the DA dropped charges against all the defendants. Although the DA dropped cases where Lusk was considered an "essential witness," Tervalon said criminal defense attorneys will likely attempt to bring up the officer's involvement in other cases at some point during trials. "He caused problems for a lot of good officers," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake