Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (Jackson, MS) Copyright: 2008 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://www.clarionledger.com/news/about/letters.html Website: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Chris Joyner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Frank+Melton MELTON BLASTS FEDERAL CHARGES Feds Prosecuting a Crime He Was Acquitted Of, Mayor Says A day after being indicted by a federal grand jury, Jackson Mayor Frank Melton belittled the charges as lacking heft despite their heavyweight appearance. After more than a year of investigating Melton, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Wednesday that Melton and his police bodyguards Marcus Wright and Michael Recio had been charged with two civil rights violations and a gun charge as a result of their role in wrecking a duplex on Ridgeway Street in west Jackson. Last year, a Hinds County jury found the three not guilty of burglary and felony criminal mischief related to damaging the house, which Melton maintains was a drug house. Now the feds are walking the same ground, despite an intense investigation, Melton said. "They've been here for 18 months, and it's a totally separate group out of Washington. They've looked at everything - I mean every durn thing. At the end of it, there is just that house," he said. "I haven't stolen anything, I haven't embezzled anything, and I certainly haven't put my hands on anybody in an abusive way." Mississippi College law school Professor Matt Steffey said charges from the federal investigation surprised him, too. Although Melton, Wright and Recio beat the state charges in their April 2007 trial, they can be tried in federal court as well because they now are accused of violating federal law. "That is a technicality if there ever was one. To the mayor, it's going to seem like he is standing trial for the same crime twice," he said. "This is a proper charge under the government's theory of the case. I just wonder what we've gained as citizens to try him under the state criminal code and then try him under the federal code. Are we going to try him under the international code in The Hague next time?" Evans Welch, a diagnosed schizophrenic with a criminal history, was living in the house the night it was damaged. Jackson resident Jennifer Sutton had recently purchased the building and inherited Welch as a tenant. Melton, Wright and Recio are charged with two counts of conspiring "under the color of law" to violate the constitutional rights of Welch and Sutton to be free of unreasonable search and seizure. The indictment also alleges Wright was armed, so the three also face a charge of using a gun during a violent crime. The men are scheduled to appear Wednesday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Linda Anderson for an initial appearance. U.S. District Court Judge Daniel Jordan III has been assigned the case. If convicted on all counts, Melton, Wright and Recio could face decades in prison. Each conspiracy count carries up to 10 years in prison. The gun charge carries a minimum five years. Prosecuting the case will be Justice Department Civil Rights Deputy Chief Mark Blumberg and Justice Department trial attorney Patricia Sumner. Wright and Recio are no longer Melton's bodyguards. They have been placed on paid leave pending the outcome of charges. In a statement released Thursday by her attorney, Sutton welcomed the federal charges. "As an American citizen, I feel that my rights were violated when my property was destroyed by the city of Jackson and our mayor, Frank Melton," she said. "I am pleased that the federal government has seen fit to attempt to right that wrong with the indictment of those who wrongfully destroyed my property." Melton, who has long held the investigation was politically motivated, said the investigation "seems like it is a big scam" to force him from office. He said before his state trial he was offered a deal that if he resigned the investigations would end. "I was offered that deal four times and I was offered that deal in writing," he said. "They came to me three of four different ways and said that if I would resign all this would go away." Melton's attorney, former Mayor Dale Danks Jr., said he is not sure he still has the written offer. But he said the understanding verbally was state and federal investigators would drop the case if Melton resigned. Melton said the deal was "bizarre" and included a provision he return to his home state of Texas for a year. Without explicitly saying he caused the damage, the mayor said he stood behind his actions on Ridgeway Street. "I was hired to get that mess out of Jackson," said Melton, who stayed home Thursday. "We have a situation here in the inner city where senior citizens have worked all their lives ... and have to be exposed to this all day and every day. "Ethically, morally, I feel like I was dead right," he said. Former Hinds County Assistant District Attorney Stanley Alexander said he never offered anyone a deal in the case but he cannot say what happened before he took over as lead prosecutor. Alexander, now a prosecutor with the state attorney general's office, said he wasn't surprised with the federal indictment. "We have a constitution to protect the rights of the minority, the little people in our society. No one is above the other when it comes to our constitution," Alexander said. "I'm prayerful justice will be served." Former Hinds County District Attorney Faye Peterson would not comment on whether there was a proposed deal. "I fully recall all events in reference the case of the State of Mississippi v. Frank Melton, however, based on the questions that you are posing, some of those events would be privileged and the Mayor nor his associates have waived any issues of privilege," Peterson said in an e-mail to The Clarion-Ledger. "I do not want to respond to any media inquiries which would impede Mayor Melton, Michael Recio or Marcus Wright's ability to receive a fair trial." Danks said he is working out arrangements to represent the mayor. He said he has contacted attorney Buddy Coxwell, who also was on Melton's defense team during his 2007 trial. Robert Shuler Smith and Winston Thompson, the attorneys for Wright and Recio during the state trial, will not be returning this time around. Smith was elected Hinds County district attorney last year and chose Thompson as his assistant. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake