Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) 
Copyright: 1998 PG Publishing. 
Pubdate: Tues, 24 Nov 1998 
Contact:  
Website: http://www.post-gazette.com/ 
Author: Bill Moushey, Post-Gazette Staff Writer 
Note: This is the third part of a 10 part series, "WIN AT ALL COSTS" being
published in the Post-Gazette. The part is composed of several stories
(being posted separately). The series is also being printed in The Blade,
Toledo, OH email: FEDS BUY INTO DEAL WITH KNOWN DRUG TRAFFICKER

David Wheeler had smuggled drugs for almost 20 years when federal agents
finally arrested the Phoenix man as he was carrying a kilogram of cocaine
in 1989 in Oklahoma. 

He faced the possibility of life in prison, so he offered federal agents a
proposition. He said he would help the government set up a sting designed
to capture key drug cartel members from Mexico to Colombia. He might snare
some Americans as well, including politicians who were on the take.

Wheeler had always been a notorious con man, but federal agents knew his
years in drug trafficking had left him well-connected. They accepted the
deal and soon regretted it, even though information he provided led to the
arrests of seven supposedly high level Mexican police officers and drug
smugglers in the sting he orchestrated in 1990.

After their trial, the government released a memorandum that a Drug
Enforcement Administration official had written. It showed that Wheeler not
only had lied constantly about his actions in the sting but had committed
at least as many crimes during the sting as those people he had set up. The
memo said he was out of the control of agents throughout the sting.

The memo bolstered the statements of the defendants, who had argued in
court that they were not drug dealers, only opportunistic individuals who
were willing to accept the millions of dollars that Wheeler had offered
them for protecting a drug enterprise.

The 9th U.S. Court of Appeals found in the government’s case that "millions
of dollars are talked about but not one speck of cocaine shows up at any
time and not one sample is gathered by the government and nothing really is
seen except, surprise, surprise, that which Mr. Wheeler says he saw . . . "

The court reversed every case in which Wheeler testified, saying the
memorandum about his misconduct was "plainly material . . . and should have
been turned over to defense attorneys."

It showed how Wheeler was "in a position to manipulate the [U.S. Bureau of]
Customs, the DEA, the defendants and the evidence."

Wheeler was never charged.
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Checked-by: Richard Lake