Pubdate: 9 Jan 1999 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer (PA) Contact: http://www.phillynews.com/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Copyright: 1999 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Author: Scott Fallon MEN SHOT BY TROOPER SENTENCED One received 8 years and the other got 7 years on drug-related charges and for eluding police. Two men who were shot in their car by a state trooper after attempting to flee from him on Route I-95 in Ewing 2years ago were sentenced to prison yesterday in Mercer County Superior Court. Under a plea arrangement, Gary Anderson, 26, of North Miami, Fla., was sentenced to 8years and Richard Thomas, 27, of Philadelphia, was sentenced to seven years by Superior Court Judge Paul Koenig. The two pleaded guilty in early September to charges of eluding police and possession of drugs with intent to distribute.According to police, state trooper Sean O'Brien pulled over a car for making an unsafe lane change and having a defective light as it was traveling south on I-95 near Trenton on the night of Aug. 27, 1996. O'Brien asked the driver, Anderson, to get out of the car after he and Thomas said they had no identification. As O'Brien walked to his patrol car, Anderson bolted back into his vehicle. O'Brien ran to the car and grabbed Anderson through the window as the car pulled away, police said. As the car drove along the shoulder of the highway, Anderson and Thomas tried to grab O'Brien's gun, police said. During the struggle, O'Brien fired three shots, wounding both men. Thomas was shot in the left arm. Anderson was shot in the right thigh and right hand. O'Brien suffered minor injuries from being dragged about 100 yards. Police found 60 pounds of marijuana with a street value of $150,000 in the car's trunk, as well as two loaded 9mm handguns near the dashboard. Prosecutors said Anderson received a longer sentence because he was the driver of the car. In August, Anderson and Thomas filed separate $1 million federal lawsuits, saying their civil liberties were violated when they were shot by O'Brien. Both contended that they were pulled over, detained, verbally abused and assaulted, all without cause. The lawsuit "is a travesty," said Lt. Col. Robert Dunlop, executive officer of the state police. "The information put into the complaintis completely erroneous. I'm just sorry the trooper had to go through this. He is the victim here." - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski