Pubdate: Sun, 19 Dec 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Page: 12E Author: Maro Robbins, San Antonio Express-News UNARMED SHERIFF REMAINS ON THE JOB Federal Drug Case Against Official In Pearsall Notable For Its Inactivity PEARSALL -- The sheriff here is forbidden to carry a gun and at the Golden Fried Chicken, where coffee costs 40 cents and talk is even cheaper, regulars sometimes wonder if he should be locked in the jail he oversees. Yet apart from gossip and the holster missing from his hip, there are few reminders that a year ago, FBI agents accused Frio County Sheriff Carl Burris of stealing cash and selling marijuana that had been seized from smugglers and stored at his office. Burris is not allowed to handle firearms while he remains free on bond. But, innocent until proven otherwise, the hulking, affable 52-year-old sheriff is still on the job. He has a year left in office, and he said he would seek a third term. What little he would say about the case is cryptic, yet optimistic. "Things are working themselves out," he said. "I think they're talking about dropping everything." Frio County, some 40 miles southwest of San Antonio, is a sparsely populated rectangle of brush and farmland. Its larger towns cling to Interstate 35, the asphalt corridor that carries away peanut harvests and, by many accounts, ushers in more than the county's share of drug trafficking. Burris was charged with trying to sell 62 pounds of marijuana in an attempt to replace $11,726 of seized drug profits that a former deputy alleges the sheriff pocketed. In the end, residents, from county leaders to patrons at the Paraiso bar, are perplexed by the seeming inaction of federal authorities, who accused the sheriff of being crooked and then fell silent. "They took his gun away from him. That's it," said one resident, who like many others insisted on anonymity, saying he feared retribution in this county of some 16,000 people. "We're still just hanging in limbo," said another resident. "I really feel like we've been dumped on." The thin case file at the federal courthouse in San Antonio reveals little. As of last week, it held orders granting Burris permission to travel but held nothing of substance beyond the initial allegations. Federal authorities, however, insist the case has neither fallen apart nor been forgotten. But citing rules that forbid them from discussing cases still open, they neither confirm nor deny that a dismissal is in the works. Richard Durbin, chief of the criminal division for the U.S. attorney's office in San Antonio, said the case remains active. But legal experts say the case appears to have followed a bizarre pace. After two years of slow investigation, authorities lurched forward Dec. 8, 1998, with the sudden arrest of the sheriff. In order to hold and charge him, they filed a criminal complaint instead of seeking a grand jury indictment, a legal shortcut often viewed as a sign of urgency. Don Kidd, a former FBI special agent, said he was "amazed" that the authorities would arrest an elected official without first obtaining the indictment needed to bring him to trial. Normally, investigators line "all their ducks in a row" before they act, especially in corruption cases that receive intense scrutiny within the Justice Department, said Kidd, now with the University of Arkansas-affiliated Criminal Justice Institute. The Burris complaint enabled the authorities to march the shackled sheriff past camera crews and into court, where a federal magistrate informed him of the allegations. He was then held overnight. The case appeared to come to a standstill after the arrest. If Burris has been indicted, prosecutors have kept it under wraps. "There's been nothing -- no developments at all," said Alfredo Villarreal, the federal public defender representing Burris. Burris is hardly impatient. Shortly after being released, he waived his right to a speedy trial, an unusual move that lifted legal requirements that he be indicted within 30 days of his arrest. On the phone, Burris sounds relaxed for a man threatened with charges that carry up to 15 years in prison and could end a 20-year career in law enforcement. His easygoing tone is perhaps a reminder that the former Olmos Park police officer has been exonerated before. In 1994, after a short trial, a state judge acquitted Burris of charges that he and a Frio County constable solicited a bribe by tearing up a traffic ticket in exchange for a shotgun and semiautomatic assault rifle. But this time, Burris faces incriminating videotapes and wire recordings, according to an affidavit by an FBI agent. The detailed affidavit alleges that Burris, who earns $32,030 a year, first pocketed $11,726 seized from smugglers. And later, when investigators asked about the money, the sheriff tried selling a bundle of seized marijuana, the proceeds of which he intended to use to replace the apparently missing evidence. As described in the federal affidavit, the case appears a classic case of "gotcha." But skepticism grows as, month after month, Burris remains in his office, beyond the trophy case of brass knuckles, switchblades and other jailhouse contraband that greets visitors to the Sheriff's Department. "Ordinarily, when you have a good case you go forward with it," said Jay Sorrell, a Pearsall attorney who backed Burris in his previous campaigns and remains a supporter, although he has since moved from the county. To legal experts, delays in criminal cases usually reflect one of two possibilities: weak evidence or both sides working on some sort of deal. The sheriff's supporters scoff at the suggestion Burris would brazenly pilfer from his office safe roughly one month after he was cleared of bribery charges. "To me, it was a setup," said Ken Grand, a former columnist for the locally published and now defunct South Texas News. "Carl's not going to jeopardize his career by taking money out to go on vacation. That's ridiculous." Burris bristles at any suggestion he is providing information to the federal investigators or even preparing a plea bargain. "I'm not cutting any deals, OK?" he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea