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: Chris Joyner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/frank+melton ANALYSIS: MELTON'S ATTORNEYS AIM TO SUGGEST RAID BENEFICIAL Jurors in the federal trial of Mayor Frank Melton took a master's course in constitutional law from federal prosecutors last week. So far, the defense has given them little more than a pop quiz in what might have driven Melton on Aug. 26, 2006, when he and his entourage raided a suspected crack house on Ridgeway Street. Melton and his former police bodyguard Michael Recio are charged with federal civil rights violations related to the raid and face between five and 25 years in prison if convicted. Defense attorneys Tuesday launched their rebuttal to nearly a week of damaging testimony, much of it centered on the mayor. But jurors heard less than an hour of testimony and arguments from the defense team, much of it broken by lengthy bench conferences and frequent recesses. Before the trial began, John Reeves, Melton's attorney, suggested he would mount a defense that Melton was not responsible for the majority of damage to the Ridgeway Street structure and that unknown "thugs" had done most of the damage after the mayor left. There was little hint of that defense Tuesday. Instead, he began a brief campaign aimed less at challenging the narrative of the prosecution's case and more aimed at shaping its meaning. "That facts of this case are straightforward," Reeves told the jury. "The key will be how you apply the facts to the law." Prosecution witnesses told jurors Melton had been warned to keep on the right side of federal law before the raid and that Melton had been drinking the night of the raid. His former bodyguard, Marcus Wright, told how Melton made an unscheduled stop on Ridgeway and directed a group of young men to break apart the duplex with sledgehammers while he attacked it with a "Walking Tall" stick. Recio is accused of standing idly by while Melton directed the destruction, doing nothing to prevent it and then engaging in a cover up after the damage was done. Rather than dispute the raw facts, Reeves instead called witnesses to plant the seed in jurors' minds that Melton had wholesome motives. Reeves called two witnesses, both of whom were admitted drug users, who professed personal knowledge of crack cocaine sales at the duplex. In testimony lasting less than 10 minutes combined, both said they told the mayor about the problem prior to the raid. Reeves plans to call a third admitted drug user this morning who will present similar testimony. After that, Reeves said he will rest his case. There is no indication Melton will testify. One of Reeves' witnesses, Hinds County inmate Daniel Smith, was sworn in and seated while the jury was out so they could not see he was in shackles. Melton seems to be resting his hopes on the jury understanding his intentions were not to break the law. Melton's actions that night were not random, Reeves told the jury. "He had a reason for being there," he said. Cynthia Stewart, Recio's attorney, took the lead in working with prosecutors and U.S. District Court Judge Dan Jordan to craft instructions for the jurors. Chief among those, from her perspective, is that jurors look separately at the two men when assigning guilt or innocence. In an unsuccessful motion for acquittal, Stewart noted prosecutors had amassed "overwhelming evidence ... against Mr. Melton that simply does not apply to Mr. Recio." If the defense attorneys have any surprises left, they are running out of opportunities. The defense may conclude its testimony today, Jordan said. Earlier, Reeves and Stewart said they would need two full days each to put on their case. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin