Source:   Houston Press, pages 10 & 11
Pubdate:  Thu, 11 Dec 1997, Vol. 9, no. 50
Contact:  (NOT) OF COUNSEL

In the latest chapter of Snitch Vs. Snitch, two of the city's top defense
lawyers are prevented from representing a client

By Steve McVicker

One of the hallowed precepts of the American justice system is that a
defendant is entitled to the counsel of his choice  or at least the best
counsel that he can afford. For Dan De La Garza, a Woodlands [Texas]
businessman facing federal moneylaundering charges, that was Kent Schaffer
and Dan Cogdell, two of Houston's premier criminaldefense attorneys.

But last week, in the latest strange twist in a longrunning tale of drugs
and deceit, U.S. District Judge Lee Rosenthal disqualified Schaffer and
Cogdell from representing De La Garza, citing their role in the arrest of
the government's key witness against their client  even though the
witness's contact with the lawyers was encouraged and facilitated by the
government.

In removing Schaffer and Cogdell from the case, Rosenthal also rejected
their motion to dismiss the four counts of moneylaundering against De La
Garza. The lawyers had argued that the charges should be dropped "due to
outrageous conduct by the government." In effect, they accused an assistant
U.S. Attorney and an agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration of
promoting a criminal act by De La Garza's longtime nemesis, and the
government's key witness, Jorge Arroyo.

Schaffer was stunned by Rosenthal's ruling, claiming that the judge was
protecting the prosecution from the result of its own illegal acts  much
as a parent shields an unruly child from the consequences of his behavior.

"I guarantee you, if I had tried to do the kinds of things they did in this
case, I'd be in jail right now," says Schaffer. "My attorney would be
arguing to the judge to at least let me stay out for Hanukkah. But yet,
when the government does it, everybody kind of winks at each other and
looks the other way."

The charges against De La Garza are based in large part on information
provided to federal authorities by Arroyo, a native of Bolivia who, like De
La Garza, was once an informant for the DEA. But the government's case was
dealt a seemingly critical setback last summer when Arroyo was arrested
after asking Schaffer and Cogdell to pay him $50,000. In return for the
money, Arroyo had promised to leave town without testifying against De La
Garza.

The attempted extortion was typical of the murky relationship between De La
Garza and Arroyo. The two hooked up in 1984, when De La Garza, then working
as a DEA informant, joined with Arroyo to personally smuggle cocaine into
the United States from Bolivia. Arroyo was a suspected smuggler and the
former soninlaw of Hugo Banzer Suarez, who claimed the Bolivian
presidency in a 1971 military coup reportedly financed by Bolivian drug
lords.

De La Garza has said that the smuggling trip was part of a DEA plan to bust
Arroyo. But things didn't go according to plan, at least for De La Garza:
He was detained during a stopover in Colombia and spent the next two years
in a Bogota prison. Arroyo, meanwhile, was arrested after arriving in the
United States. De La Garza has maintained that he was set up for arrest in
Colombia by Arroyo and a DEA agent named Roger Norman.

After his release from jail, De La Garza returned to Houston and prospered,
making millions in real estate. But he still occasionally ran afoul of
state and federal law, and he still kept in touch with DEA snitch Arroyo 
apparently in hopes of evening the score for his imprisonment in Colombia.
But Arroyo also apparently entertained the notion of revenge, and it was he
who informed federal investigators that De La Garza was interested in
laundering drug money. (De La Garza has denied the accusations to the
Press, saying his only connection with drugs has been as a DEA informant.)

Three days before De La Garza's trial was set to begin in August, Arroyo
called Schaffer and Cogdell and asked them to meet him at Houston's, a
usually crowded restaurant on Kirby Drive. Arroyo had just returned to the
United States from Brazil to testify against De La Garza, so the two
attorneys were, naturally, interested in talking with him.

But Arroyo didn't come to the restaurant to discuss the facts of the case;
instead, he solicited the $50,000 from the attorneys. Schaffer and Cogdell
say they were dumbfounded by Arroyo's request, and they arranged for a
second meeting the next day.

In the meantime, the lawyers notified District Attorney Johnny Holmes.
After being wired for sound and provided with $50,000 in "flash money" by
the D.A., the attorneys met with Arroyo in Schaffer's office. With the tape
rolling, Cogdell made it clear that all parties believed the $50,000
guaranteed that Arroyo wouldn't testify against De La Garza, and that the
idea had been Arroyo's. After Cogdell left the room, Schaffer handed the
cash over to Arroyo, who was subsequently busted by waiting investigators
from Holmes's office.

Arroyo is now in prison after pleading guilty to a federal charge of
obstruction of justice.

During a hearing last month on Schaffer's motion to have the charges
against De La Garza dismissed, DEA agent Norman, who was Arroyo's
supervisor at the agency, testified that the government was aware that
Schaffer and Cogdell had been trying to get in touch with Arroyo since May.
The agent claimed Arroyo feared that the attorneys were attempting "to set
him up," although he said the informant didn't tell him why or how, and he
didn't bother to ask. Norman testified that he contacted assistant U.S.
Attorney Robert Stabe, the lead prosecutor in the De La Garza case, and
they arranged for Arroyo to reach the attorneys by phone from Brazil. Those
calls, Norman admitted, were monitored and recorded by the feds.

In all, Arroyo made four recorded calls from Brazil, reaching Schaffer, who
had represented Arroyo several years earlier on drug charges, on one
occasion. As Stabe and Norman electronically eavesdropped, Schaffer asked
Arroyo how he'd been doing and told him that Cogdell wanted to talk with
him. Schaffer then transferred Arroyo's call to Cogdell's law firm, but
Cogdell was not in his office. Norman told the judge that the brief
exchange between Arroyo and Schaffer revealed nothing sinister;
nonetheless, he and Stabe opted not to contact the defense lawyers about
Arroyo's fear of being set up.

According to Norman, when Arroyo arrived in Houston two months later to
testify against De La Garza, the informant again expressed concern that
Cogdell and Schaffer were trying to frame him. At that point, Norman
claimed, he and Stabe advised Arroyo not to discuss the upcoming trial with
anyone. But Norman testified that he and Stabe also provided Arroyo with
two blank cassette tapes and a handheld recorder adapted to tape telephone
conversations  just in case the informant did decide to contact the
attorneys. Later that week, Arroyo met with Cogdell and Schaffer at
Houston's.

Norman testified that he didn't know if Arroyo recorded the meeting at
Houston's, but he insisted that neither he nor Stabe suggested their
witness solicit money from the lawyers. That idea, he said, was entirely
Arroyo's.

Stabe, meanwhile, argued to Rosenthal that the government could not
completely control Arroyo and should not be penalized for his conduct, and
he asked the judge to remove Cogdell and Schaffer as De La Garza's lawyers.

"They argued that if we had just kept our mouths shut, we could have
proceeded to trial, and the bribery solicitation would have never become an
issue," says Schaffer. "So in the opinion of the government, we created our
own problem by reporting the crime. Of course, if we hadn't, we would have
been subjecting ourselves to prosecution and disbarment."

Even before Arroyo's bribery solicitation, Stabe was trying to prevent
Schaffer from representing De La Garza.

Less than a week before De La Garza was to go to trial and three days
before Arroyo was arrested, Stabe filed a motion to disqualify Schaffer on
the grounds that the lawyer had represented Arroyo on drug charges in the
mid'80s. Stabe insisted in court last month that he submitted his motion
at that advanced date because he only learned in late July that Schaffer
was defending De La Garza. That assertion was contradicted by Norman, whose
testimony indicated that both he and Stabe knew of Schaffer's involvement
in the case as early as May.

In a brief filed with Rosenthal on behalf of Schaffer and Cogdell, two
associations of criminal lawyers maintained that Stabe and Norman should be
held accountable for the actions of their witness, since they encouraged
Arroyo to call the lawyers and provided him with recording equipment.

"Schaffer and Cogdell did nothing wrong," says attorney Stanley Schneider,
who helped write the brief for the National Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers. "The only thing they did was meet with a witness in a criminal
case  which they have an ethical duty to do. This [practice by the
government] shouldn't be just the concern of attorneys. This sort of
government intrusion should be a concern to everyone."

David Bires, who shares office space with Schaffer, now represents De La
Garza, whose trial has been reset for March 2. Bires will undoubtedly try
to bring Arroyo's bribery solicitation to the attention of the jury;
Rosenthal has indicated that she will wait to rule on whether that evidence
can be introduced at the trial. If Rosenthal permits, Bires will probably
argue that the case against De La Garza was manufactured by Arroyo at the
behest of agent Norman.

While working as an informant for Norman in the early 1980s, De La Garza
maintained that the agent had two other informants killed in order to steal
money from them. De La Garza's allegations were even cited in a 1986
opinion by the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals when it overturned
Arroyo's 1985 conviction on drugsmuggling charges.

Norman, who is now the supervisor of the DEA office in Sacramento, was
never charged in the deaths of the informants, who are still missing. For
that matter, says Schaffer, it doesn't appear that De La Garza's
accusations against Norman were even checked out. Before being replaced as
De La Garza's attorney, Schaffer says, he asked both the DEA and the FBI
for their files on the Norman investigation but was told nothing of the
sort exists.

"Either they were lying or they just didn't give a shit," says Schaffer.
"It's just amazing that an agent can be accused of murdering someone and
stealing their money and the agency just says, 'So what? It's just another
action of a bad child.'"