Pubdate: Tue, 12 May 2009 Source: News & Observer (Raleigh, NC) Copyright: 2009 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.newsobserver.com/484/story/433256.html Website: http://www.newsobserver.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Sarah Ovaska COCAINE CASE FALLS APART After 21 Months in Jail, a Cleared Man Goes Home RALEIGH - For 21 months, Gerardo Vilchez's life was contained inside a jail cell as he awaited a trial on trafficking charges that stemmed from one of Wake County's biggest drug busts. He was set free last week, after a Wake jury rejected accusations by a Wake sheriff's investigator and prosecutors that Vilchez conspired to transport 32 kilograms of cocaine, or more than 70 pounds, in the tires of a passenger bus he drove from northern Mexico. Now the criminal case surrounding the $3.2 million worth of drugs appears to be nearing an end, with little chance that whoever placed the cocaine inside the tires or who intended to profit from it will be charged. The only two people ever charged were Vilchez and Victor Hugo Lopez, a bus attendant, who remains in jail awaiting a trial on the same charges Vilchez faced. Vilchez, a U.S. citizen who lives in Mexico, told jurors he had no idea the drugs were hidden in the tires of his bus. He said he was just driving the vehicle to places along a route selected by dispatchers for the Texas tour bus company that employed him. He also said he resents the drug trade and what narcotics smuggling has done to Mexico, which has been torn apart by violence as Mexico's federal government struggles to crack down on powerful, wealthy drug cartels. "The people that are involved in drug trafficking, they use the innocent people," Vilchez said. "All they want is to make money." In jail, his only view was through a small window that looks out on Raleigh's downtown streets. "It was beautiful," he said. Resuming life If the jury had convicted him of the cocaine trafficking charges, Vilchez would have gone to prison for at least 14 years, the mandatory term for the amount of drugs recovered in the bust. "It would have destroyed my life," Vilchez said. He's eager to return to that life, where he's a husband and father to three sons. He was once a chief for the volunteer fire department of the small, scenic village he lives in outside the northern Mexican city of Monterrey, a few hours south of the Texas border. His first grandchild, Emilio, now 1, was born while Vilchez was jailed in Raleigh. Vilchez hopped on a plane Friday headed for Corpus Christi, Texas, where he planned to stay with his parents and work at their Western-style boot and shoe shop until he can renew his U.S. passport. Vilchez, who was born in a small South Texas town and holds U.S. citizenship, wants to resume driving buses from Mexico to the U.S. and will need his passport to cross the border. In June, federal rules will require U.S. citizens to show their passports to re-enter the country from Canada, Mexico and Caribbean countries. Vilchez hopes he'll get the passport by Saturday so he can get home and see his wife on their 28th wedding anniversary. Kilos under rubber When Vilchez arrived in the Triangle in July 2007, it was the first trip he'd ever taken for the Texas-based tour company, he said. He dropped off passengers in Atlanta and was sent to the Raleigh area to pick up more people before returning to Mexico. A bus dispatcher told him to head to a specific tire shop in Zebulon to check the bus's brakes. After a Wake deputy pulled over Vilchez's bus near Zebulon for running a red light, the officer suspected something was amiss. A drug-sniffing police dog detected kilograms of cocaine bolted to the inside of the bus's rear tires, wrapped with various materials to make it undetectable at checkpoints near the country's border. The cocaine was hidden so expertly it took several hours to remove, said Mike Petty, his court-appointed defense attorney. David Sherlin, a Wake assistant district attorney, said he hasn't decided what he'll do with the charges against Lopez, the bus attendant arrested alongside Vilchez. Twenty-one months after his arrest, Vilchez is remarkably calm when he talks about his confinement, crediting his Baptist faith for his resolve. "I thought they'd forgotten about me," Vilchez said. Sherlin said that wasn't so, but it took time to prepare the case and contend with an already busy local court system. He also argued that Vilchez made inconsistent statements between his arrest and his trial. "No one wanted to rush into a trial without having a full understanding of what actually happened," Sherlin said. At the $70 a day the sheriff's office estimates it spends housing inmates, it cost Wake County $45,920 to keep Vilchez for 656 days from his arrest until he heard the jury's "not guilty." Vilchez says he spent his time in jail talking to younger inmates, especially those who have dealt or used drugs, urging them to change their ways. "Whether you sell the drugs or use them, it may be good for a moment, but it's going to put you in jail or kill you," he said. 'You can't give time back' N.C. Indigent Defense Services, which oversees the various public defender offices in the state that appoint lawyers to represent criminal defendants, doesn't track how long people spend in jail awaiting trial, said Thomas Maher, director of the state agency. "People are spending time in jail that end up being acquitted, and you can't give them that time back," Maher said. "You end up being punished by the system when you haven't committed a crime." On Thursday evening, Vilchez stood on a side street in downtown Raleigh, pointing up to the window of the jail pod he called home for 15 of the 21 months he was there. He waved, wondering if his cellmates were looking out. Every day he used to peer at people on downtown sidewalks. One day, he remembered thinking, he would join them. "And right now I'm here," he said, a smile spreading across his face. Sidebar Drug problems in N.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake