Source: Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com Pubdate: Tue, 24 Mar 1998 Author: Linda Stewart Ball / The Dallas Morning News PLANO CHIEF DEFENDS DRUG STINGS But suspect questions tactics of investigation Plano Police Chief Bruce Glasscock defended his department's undercover stings in Plano high schools Monday against allegations of entrapment and child endangerment by a student and his parents. "We . . . are confident this investigation was handled in a professional manner," the chief said during a news conference Monday afternoon. He said the Collin County district attorney's office reviewed his department's information before any warrants were issued, and that a Collin County grand jury indicted those arrested. But an attorney for Jonathan Kollman, 17, questioned the Police Department's tactics. The teen was among 31 people arrested as part of "Operation Rockfest," the undercover investigation that has led to 84 cases against 33 adults and four juveniles. Specifically, attorney Phillip Wainscott said the undercover detective knew that Mr. Kollman, who was 16 at the time, was battling a two-year addiction with drugs when she lured him into using heroin again. She gave him the cash to buy it, drove him in a little red sports car to the pushers who sold it and then, Mr. Wainscott said, she allowed him to use it. "This is a lot of temptation for anyone, for any kid," he said. "But to prey upon and to be a predator upon a kid who is trying to kick the drug habit . . . is disgusting." Angela Kollman, Mr. Kollman's mother, said, "We feel like the Plano Police Department was our son's drug supplier." Mr. Kollman, who is out on $40,000 bail, plans to enroll in a drug treatment center in Hunt County on Tuesday. He said that he could have said no to the undercover cop, but it wasn't that easy. "I was trapped," he said. "The police officer always called me." Chief Glasscock said Plano Police Department policies and practices prevent him from elaborating on the allegations. Because of ongoing investigations, he also declined to discuss the methods they use for undercover operations. "The facts of this case will come out in trial," he said. "At that time you will be able to draw a more accurate picture of this defendant and the circumstances which led to his arrest. "This is diverting our attention away from what the real issue is: dealing with and responding to the drug problem that is in this community," the chief said. At least a dozen youths with Plano ties have died of heroin overdoses in the last 18 months. "We're proud to live in Plano," said Mrs. Kollman, a science teacher at a Plano high school. "It's a great city. They've got a drug problem. They need to clean it up - just not this way." Last fall - prior to meeting the young woman who, unbeknownst to Mr. Kollman, was a police officer - the youth tested negative for drugs 12 times, his parents said. "Police should not be contributing to making him worse," said Jonathan's father, Victor Kollman, a Lutheran minister. Jonathan Kollman, an A and B student who takes honors classes, said he wants to go to college and be successful. But first he must kick his addiction to drugs that began out of a curiosity about marijuana, he said. Mr. Kollman was arrested on two counts of delivery of a controlled substance on March 16. Mr. Wainscott said he wants a grand jury in either Collin or Dallas county to investigate the Plano Police Department's methods to determine whether there was any criminal conduct on the officer's behalf. "I'm a former police officer of 21 years and I've never come across anything like this," Mr. Wainscott said, adding that he is considering filing suit against the department. "You don't put on the street what you're attempting to take off." But Bill Schultz, first assistant district attorney in the Collin County district attorney's office, said different rules apply when police go undercover, and they don't always agree with everyone's sense of propriety. "It's the only area where police must lie to the people they're dealing with to achieve results," he said. "If Kollman thinks he's been entrapped I guess he can lay that on the jury and see what it thinks."