Pubdate: Tuesday, January 26, 1999 Source: Herald, The (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Author: Scott North And Jim Haley RECORDS SHOW DRUGS ON TREASURER'S SHIRT Dantini Denies Cocaine Use, Won't Face Criminal Charges Traces of cocaine were found in the pocket of pajamas that Snohomish County Treasurer Bob Dantini was wearing during a May altercation with his former fiancee, according to police documents obtained Monday by The Herald. Dantini was stunned by the news, and denied ever using cocaine. "Never," he said. "Not once." The particles of cocaine were found in tests conducted by the Washington State Patrol crime lab after Dantini, 48, was arrested May 28 following an alleged drug-related fracas with his ex-girlfriend, then 27, the documents show. The woman told investigators from the Snohomish County Sheriff's Office that Dantini had a drug problem, and that the pair fought that night after she allegedly caught him using cocaine in the bathroom of his home near Snohomish, records show. The woman claimed she ripped Dantini's plaid flannel pajama top trying to get at a vial of cocaine he allegedly stuffed in a pocket, according to police reports. The woman said she hid the drugs in a shoe in her car, and tearfully told deputies where to find it after they were summoned to the home with a 911 call, according to court documents. Dantini is not charged with a crime and won't be, the state Attorney General's Office announced Thursday. There are problems with the case, notably that the woman has ceased to cooperate with police and prosecutors, assistant attorney general Jerry Ackerman said Monday. Dantini said he was surprised by the lab report, and insisted the cocaine "wasn't in the pocket when I had the shirt on." He alleged the cocaine found on his clothing came from his former fiancee. The woman had access to the pajama top during the hours he was jailed in the aftermath of the fight, he said. "If they (police) found cocaine, that's the only possibility," he said. The fight wasn't over drugs, but his desire to end his four-year relationship with the woman, Dantini said, adding that she was the aggressor and he had merely protected himself. Dantini said the pajama top was torn in the altercation, and that he asked deputies the morning after the fight to take it as evidence in support of his story. The treasurer initially was charged with misdemeanor domestic violence assault, but the charge was swiftly dropped after lab tests showed cocaine was involved. Sheriff Rick Bart on Monday stood by his investigation and his department's decision to recommend that prosecutors consider filing a drug possession charge against Dantini. Bart said he instructed detectives to have Dantini's pajama top examined for drugs in part to test the veracity of the woman's story. "When the results from the lab test came back, we felt we had enough probable cause to refer the case as a felony," he said. Ackerman said he understood why sheriff's detectives would recommend charges. But he also said that the woman swiftly stopped cooperating with investigators and has made it clear that she won't be a witness against her former boyfriend. What the woman told detectives immediately after the fracas with Dantini would not be admissible in a criminal case unless she was willing to testify herself, Ackerman said. Conversely, the woman can't be hauled into court and forced to testify about the drugs because of her Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination, Ackerman said. "What we know is the vial of cocaine was hidden in her shoe in her car," he said. Moreover, the woman acknowledged handling the cocaine and ripping Dantini's shirt, he said. Given those facts, there is no way to show that the woman herself didn't somehow leave the drug traces on Dantini's clothing, and no way to convince a jury otherwise, Ackerman said. "Without her testimony, I can't see any way that we are going to do that," he added. Dantini is nearing the end of his first four-year term in office. He intends to seek re-election, and said earlier he is hopeful his legal troubles won't be an issue in the race. The Herald obtained the lab test and police reports using state public record laws. The documents had been secret during the investigation, but became public records after the case was closed Thursday without charges being filed. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry