Pubdate: Mon, 20 Jun 2011 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Justin Scheck POLICE SCANDALS HOBBLE PROSECUTORS Hundreds Of Criminal Cases Dismissed In San Francisco Bay Area As Allegations Of Law-Enforcement Corruption Persist SAN FRANCISCO-Bay Area prosecutors have been forced to dismiss more than 800 criminal cases in the past year because of allegations of police corruption that include selling drug evidence, conducting unlawful searches and conspiring to get men drunk and then arrest them on drunk-driving charges. The series of police scandals has taxed the budgets of the district-attorney and public-defender offices, and prompted two federal investigations. In some cases, defense lawyers found that security-camera videos in residential hotels-showing police making drug arrests-apparently contradicted the officers' sworn statements. In one case, a suspect was seen in a video of his arrest wearing a different jacket from the one the officers entered into evidence. Last year, the San Francisco district attorney dismissed about 700 criminal cases after a drug crime-lab worker was accused of stealing evidence. This year, since March, the district attorney has dismissed about 125 cases, mainly felony drug prosecutions. East of San Francisco in Contra Costa County, the state-run County Narcotics Enforcement Team, or CNET, has been caught up in a widening scandal resulting in the dismissal of 15 cases, according to the county district attorney. The district attorney said earlier this month he was turning the investigation of the cases over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The CNET chief, two police officers and a private investigator are charged with a range of gun, drug and other crimes, including selling methamphetamine, steroids and marijuana stolen from evidence lockers. The four also are charged with masterminding a plot to get men drunk and then arrest them for driving while intoxicated. In November of last year, prosecutors charge, the private investigator "arranged to have a female decoy" invite men to a bar. The men were going through divorce proceedings in which he represented their wives. After the man and the decoy drank for a while, one of the police officers would call another and ask him to stop the man's car on suspicion of drunk driving, the indictment says. Lawyers for the CNET chief and the investigator say their clients admit some wrongdoing and are cooperating with investigators. Peter Keane, a professor at Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco and a former defense lawyer, said the scandals raise questions about whether there is a "systemic problem" in the oversight of state and local narcotics investigators in California. Mr. Keane blames the problem partly on the intrusive nature of drug investigations. "So much of making drug arrests involves going into somebody's house," he said. Lt. Troy Dangerfield, a spokesman for the San Francisco Police Department, said no officers have been charged with misconduct, though the investigation is ongoing. He said several officers have been reassigned from undercover duty, and that some dismissed cases could be refiled if officers were cleared of wrongdoing. George Gascon, appointed district attorney in San Francisco this year after serving as San Francisco police chief since 2009, said the scandals have resulted in his office "having to spend a lot of resources to make decisions on mistakes and bad practices in the past." Defense lawyers have credited Mr. Gascon with trying to investigate, rather than conceal, the problems. At his request, the FBI is examining arrests made at low-income hotels. The investigation is looking into "allegations that SFPD officers were conducting unauthorized searches," an FBI spokeswoman said. San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi has held news conferences to show videos that raise questions about police searches. Mr. Adachi said his office is reviewing about 7,000 cases for possible police wrongdoing. Jesus Reyes, 65 years old, a resident of the Julian House hotel in San Francisco, was arrested Feb. 25 on drug charges. ,In an interview and in court filings Mr. Reyes said that police searched him and a van he was in without his consent. They took his keys, entered his apartment and searched it, he said. "I asked them if they had a search warrant, and they just ignored me," Mr. Reyes said. During the apartment search, police confiscated a laptop computer and camera, and found a small amount of methamphetamine. They arrested Mr. Reyes and jailed him for three days, Mr. Reyes said. The laptop and camera weren't recorded in the police report as confiscated evidence. In May, a judge dismissed the case after Mr. Reyes's lawyer obtained a video showing officers entering the room and leaving with bags apparently containing the belongings that were later not booked as evidence. The police declined to comment on the case. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D