Pubdate: Sat, 17 Jan 2009 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2009 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Contact: http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/letters/sendletter.html Website: http://www.ajc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Steve Visser Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?246 (Policing - United States - News) TURF WAR TOPPLES STATES'S SENTENCE Turf War Topples State's Sentence Cops Indictment Scrapped District Attorney Paul Howard botched the prosecution of a former Atlanta police officer because the crime was actually committed in DeKalb County -- outside Howard's jurisdiction -- the former cop's lawyer said Friday. The Georgia Court of Appeals this week overturned Arthur Bruce Tesler's five-year sentence for lying to the FBI to cover up his narcotics squad's illegal 2006 raid that left an innocent 92-year-old woman dead. The court said Howard didn't prove Fulton County had jurisdiction in the case. "The Court of Appeals did what the law required -- it's not rocket science -- the FBI's office is in DeKalb," said Markel Hutchins, a spokesman for the family of Kathryn Johnston, the victim. "The family obviously had concerns about how the district attorney could allow this to happen, and that was something I couldn't answer." Fortunately, Hutchins said, he and the family had pressured federal authorities to also prosecute Tesler. In October, the former cop, who is now state prison, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to violating Johnston's civil rights and faces a possible 10-year federal stint when he is sentenced next month. The state appeals court said Howard could retry Tesler by showing he was in Fulton County when he lied to FBI agents. Johnston was killed in Fulton County. Tesler's lawyer, Bill McKenney, said Friday that the FBI interview was at the FBI's Century Center Parkway office. In a statement Friday, Howard said he would wait until after the federal sentencing to decide on any further legal action against Tesler. McKenney said any retrial would need the blessing of the Georgia Supreme Court, which would have to accept Howard's arguments that it was irrelevant that the FBI interview occurred in DeKalb County. Howard said the state conviction influenced Tesler to plead guilty in federal court. "Tesler steadfastly refused to accept responsibility," Howard said. "It was only after his conviction in Fulton County that Tesler ultimately did admit his guilt." Howard indicted Tesler for lying to investigators, violating his oath of office and false imprisonment. In May a jury acquitted Tesler of the oath and imprisonment charges but convicted him of lying to the FBI. Johnston was killed in a fusillade of police bullets after she fired a shot when she heard men breaking down the door of her home in the high-crime neighborhood on Neal Street -- without announcing they were police. Tesler, guarding the back of Johnston's Vine City home, did not shoot but participated in the coverup afterward. McKenney said Howard botched the indictment because of his turf war with federal authorities over who would prosecute Tesler and two co-defendants, Gregg Junnier and Jason R. Smith, who later took plea bargains. "There was a rush to indict and in doing so they lost sight of the fact that the FBI interview took place in DeKalb County," McKenney said. When McKenney raised the venue question at the May trial, prosecutors Kellie Hill and Peter Odom persuaded Superior Court Judge Michael Johnson that they had jurisdiction because Tesler's lie at the FBI office was part of a conspiracy that began in Fulton County. The appellate court, however, noted Tesler was convicted of the specific crime of lying in an official investigation -- not of conspiracy to lie -- and had to be tried where the crime was committed. Howard, however, did not pursue a conspiracy charge. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin