Pubdate: Wed, 08 Dec 1999 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 1999, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Contact: 414-224-8280 Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Forum: http://www.jsonline.com/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimate.cgi Author: Kevin Murphy, Special to the Journal Sentinel FIREFIGHTER UNFAIRLY SINGLED OUT IN MADISON COKE CASE, LAWYER SAYS Madison - A Madison firefighter sentenced Tuesday to one month in jail for allowing cocaine to be delivered to his house was unfairly singled out for prosecution in federal court because he is a public employee, his attorney said. Michael Merkel, 52, who earlier pleaded guilty to attempting to possess cocaine, a misdemeanor, also was fined $1,000 and ordered to serve 400 hours of community service. His attorney, Mark Eisenberg, said he could not recall another case of cocaine possession being prosecuted in federal court in Madison. "Every case has gone to state court, where they get a chance to undergo treatment and have the record wiped clean if they complete the terms of probation," Eisenberg said. Eisenberg said he would have agreed with Magistrate Stephen Crocker's decision to punish Merkel because he is a firefighter if it had affected his job performance. Although Merkel admitted being an occasional cocaine user, he did not use the drug on the job, FBI agent Ted Wasky said when Merkel pleaded guilty in October. "He made a poor choice and should be punished for his poor choice, but he's already been publicly ridiculed, fined and will be put on supervised release. The jail was entirely discretionary and it was given, I believe, because he was a firefighter," Eisenberg said. U.S. Attorney Peggy Lautenschlager said she believed that Merkel's drug activity was more extensive than simple possession and that concerns over public safety were considered in his prosecution. "There's always a concern when the person using cocaine is subject to 24-hour call-in duties. Not only is (cocaine use) illegal, but there was a possibility of his being called to duty after using cocaine off duty," she said. Merkel and Terry Rice, both longtime Madison firefighters, were charged in federal court after an FBI investigation of a drug network that smuggled up to 11 pounds of cocaine from California to Madison. The package shipped to Merkel contained less than 2 ounces of cocaine, authorities said. The FBI considered the firefighters minor players in the network. Rice is scheduled to be sentenced Friday in federal court. Merkel is scheduled to begin serving his jail sentence Jan. 3. Merkel and Rice have been suspended with pay pending the outcome of an investigation by the Madison Fire Department. - --- MAP posted-by: allan wilkinson