Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (Jackson, MS) Copyright: 2009 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: Blair Goldstein MELTON'S DEFENSE MAKES ITS CASE If wrapped up today, verdict could come by end of the week Defense attorneys for Mayor Frank Melton and his former police bodyguard Michael Recio expect to wrap up their cases today in federal court, paving the way for a possible verdict by the end of the week. It is still unclear whether Melton plans to take the stand. However, Recio's attorney, Cynthia Stewart, indicated Recio likely will testify. The plan was announced Tuesday at the end of a stop-and-go day at the federal court house in downtown Jackson. U.S. District Judge Dan Jordan asked attorneys to be prepared to give closing statements this afternoon. Federal prosectors said their statement likely would last one hour. Tuesday was day one of the defense's case. Jurors heard an opening statement from Melton's attorney as well as testimony from three defense witnesses. Melton, 59, and Recio, 39, face federal civil rights charges related to a warrantless, police-style raid on a Jackson duplex in August 2006. Melton later said the building was a "crack house." If convicted on all counts, the men face between five and 25 years in prison. A guilty verdict would force Melton from office. Recio, who is on leave from the Jackson Police Department with pay, would have to surrender his badge. Melton's attorney, John Reeves, did not give his opening statement at the beginning of the trial. Instead, he reserved the statement until Tuesday. In less than 10 minutes, Reeves told the jury that Melton does not dispute that he was present at the duplex the night of August 26, 2006. Instead, Reeves said Melton disputes that he intended to violate anyone's constitutional rights. "A violation of the constitution, by itself, is not a crime," Reeves said. He told jurors they will hear from witnesses who bought, used or sold drugs at the duplex and who told Melton about the activity. "The evidence will show that Mayor Frank Melton did not just pop in that day willy-nilly," Reeves said. "He had a reason for being there." Reeves called two of those witnesses Tuesday. In brief testimony, the first, Tamaria Evans, said she had been an alcoholic and drug user, knew drugs were sold at the duplex and passed the information on to the mayor. The other witness, Daniel Smith, testified he was a crack user and that he had told Melton the day of the raid that crack cocaine was used and sold at the duplex. Smith, a Hinds County inmate, was led into the courtroom in shackles and an orange prison jumpsuit. Jordan put Smith on the stand while the jury was at lunch to make sure he was advised of his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself and to offer him the services of a federal public defender. "No, your honor, I'm fine," he said. Before offering his official testimony, Melton arranged for Smith to change into a blue Jackson State University pullover and blue sweat pants. He was sitting at the witness stand when jurors walked in so they could not see the shackles on his wrists and ankles. On cross-examination, federal prosecutor Mark Blumberg asked Smith if he purchased illegal drugs at the duplex the morning of the raid. Smith said he had. Blumberg then asked if he had been arrested or questioned about that purchase. Smith said he had not. Recio's attorney, Cynthia Stewart, called Jackson police officer Quincy Russell to the stand. Russell testified he was sent to the duplex the night of the raid by police dispatch. He said he arrested duplex tenant Evans Welch on an outstanding arrest warrant and found two crack pipes and the tool used to push drugs into the pipe in Welch's pockets. Stewart fought to get testimony about the crack pipes admitted into court. Federal prosecutors argued the pipes were unrelated to the Fourth Amendment charges. Jordan ruled the information could be admitted after Stewart said, "This has to do with what police business was being done that night." However, Jordan said the pipes would have only limited significance since they were found after the duplex had been damaged in the raid. "The party took sledge hammers to the house before they found the crack pipes," Jordan said. In cross-examination, federal prosector Patricia Sumner went after the notion that the arrest of Welch reflected honest police work had occurred. She asked Russell if he merely transported Welch that night, as the defense indicated. He testified that he, not Recio, arrested Welch, filled out all of the paperwork related to the arrest and transported Welch to police headquarters. Reeves said he plans to call one additional witness today, Christopher Walker. Although Walker is in the federal prison system, the court had trouble tracking him down last week. Jordan told attorneys Tuesday that Walker was now in Jackson. He had been in a Lafayette, La., prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin