Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jul 2010 Source: Detroit News (MI) Copyright: 2010 The Detroit News Contact: http://detnews.com/article/99999999/INFO/71011004 Website: http://detnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126 Pubdate: 05 July 2010 Author: Francis X. Donnelly LAWYER IS ENSNARED IN WASHTENAW DRUG CASE Girlfriend gave heroin to overdose victim; lawyer is being prosecuted for paying for it Ann Arbor -- Tracy Corson introduced a friend to heroin. Two weeks later, after both shared the drug, the friend died of an overdose. Corson was charged under a new state law that says a person who "delivers" an illegal drug that results in death could be held criminally responsible. But prosecutors didn't stop there. They also charged her boyfriend, Ron Plunkett, a prominent Brighton lawyer. His offense: paying for the heroin. Corson served two years in prison after the 2006 death. Plunkett, 53, is facing life. His trial, delayed by an appeal that marked the first significant challenge to the new law, is now scheduled for November. His supporters say a measure meant for drug dealers is being used unfairly against someone marginally involved in a drug death. "It was Corson who bought, carried, mixed and handed heroin to the deceased," said one of Plunkett's attorneys, Kevin Gentry of Whitmore Lake. Corson reached a plea agreement with prosecutors in exchange for testifying against Plunkett. Although the case hasn't gone to trial, it already has divided several courts. An Ann Arbor district court found probable cause, but a Washtenaw County Circuit Court reversed the decision. A Michigan Court of Appeals panel upheld the reversal by a 2-1 vote but the Michigan Supreme Court, in another split vote, affirmed the district court's ruling by a 4-3 margin. Even Corson seems ambivalent about the complicity of her former boyfriend. "Do I think he was a saint? No," she told The Detroit News. "Do I think he was a monster? No." Accused of financing deal According to prosecutors, Tiffany Gregory would still be alive if not for Plunkett. He was the one who drove Corson to Detroit to buy the heroin that killed Gregory, and he was the one who paid for it, according to testimony. Corson, who stopped working as a prostitute after moving in with Plunkett, never would have been able to afford the drugs on her own, said prosecutors. "Defendant utilized heroin-addicted prostitutes to make his frequent purchases, providing the women with the money, the transportation and the haven for drug use," said Joseph Burke, chief assistant prosecuting attorney for Washtenaw County. Six months before Gregory died in June 2006, Michigan enacted a state law that established penalties for the distribution of drugs that caused death. Prior to that, people could be charged with possessing or selling drugs, but no mechanism existed to charge them with contributing to a person's death. In signing the law, Gov. Jennifer Granholm lauded it as another way to punish drug dealers. But legal scholars say it may go much further than that. The Michigan Supreme Court ruling that upheld the law was so broad that anyone who buys drugs could be charged with the same offenses as the seller, said Peter Henning, a former federal prosecutor who now is a law professor at Wayne State University. "Any buyer could be charged with aiding and abetting the delivery," he said. "That's a pretty radical step." While people are split over Plunkett's culpability, many agree he had a horrid drug addiction. It led to the loss of his home, savings and law license, according to public records. His addiction was so severe that he continued using drugs seven months after the woman's overdose, even as police contemplated charging him in the death, said prosecutors. "He went off the deep end," said Mike Edwards, Plunkett's former father-in-law. "It's a shame." It's unclear when his descent began. But by 2005, he was buying crack and heroin nearly every night, said prosecutors. The crack was for him. The heroin was for a succession of drug-addicted women who lived with him, trading sex for drugs, they said. "Defendant was leading a double life," prosecutor Burke wrote in pleadings. "By day he was doing his best to keep his law practice going. Once the workday was done, his life was drugs and satisfying his sexual urges." Corson was a 20-year-old prostitute when she was introduced to Plunkett by a mutual drug dealer in February 2006, she testified during a preliminary examination for Plunkett. She moved into his apartment in Ann Arbor three months later. Each night, after Plunkett got off work, they drove to a parking lot in northwest Detroit to meet a drug dealer named Boo, Corson said in testimony. Plunkett gave the money to Corson, who hopped into the dealer's car to get the drugs. They always bought the same thing: $100 worth of crack in a plastic baggie and $100 worth of heroin wrapped in tin foil. Once a workaholic, Plunkett turned into a no-show at his job, said former clients. He stopped returning calls. He kept clients waiting for hours. He missed deadlines. He was unprepared for trials. Ten clients complained he didn't work on their cases after being paid, according to the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board, which suspended his license. "There was a time in Ron's life I would have called him a great attorney," said Bev Carr, 51, an Ypsilanti resident who has known Plunkett for several years. But when her daughter faced legal trouble, she said Plunkett ignored letters and reports she produced for the case; she had to beg him to visit her daughter in jail. "His only concern was when the next payment was coming," she said. Childhood friend invited over Plunkett's use of drugs went horribly awry in June 2006. He and Corson were smoking crack in their apartment at 3 a.m. when Corson invited Tiffany Gregory to join them, Corson testified. The women were childhood friends who lost touch but had reunited two weeks earlier. Corson had told her friend about her addiction to heroin and shared the drug with her. A waitress at a Big Boy restaurant, Gregory belonged to the National Guard and was fretting about her first deployment to Iraq later that year. She came to the apartment and, after smoking crack with Plunkett, the two women retreated to the bedroom, said Corson. Plunkett, who didn't use heroin, remained in the living room. Corson retrieved drug paraphernalia from her underwear drawer and prepared the heroin. After Gregory injected it, she lost consciousness and turned blue. The heroin was three times the amount normally used by addicts, said the Washtenaw County Medical Examiner's Office. Hoping to revive Gregory, Corson began to fill the bathtub with cold water. She changed her mind and called 911. As she hid the drug equipment, Plunkett dumped a plate of crack off the fourthfloor balcony, said Corson. Waiting for the police and emergency workers to appear, Plunkett worried that police would recognize him. After all, he told Corson, he was a prominent attorney. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt