Pubdate: Tuesday, August 31, 1999 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 1999 Roanoke Times Contact: 201 W. Campbell Ave., Roanoke, Va. 24010 Website: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/index.html Author: Michael Hemphill EX-INFORMANT'S MOTHER TO FORFEIT $20,449 FOR ROLE IN PRISON-DRUG CASE Jury Orders Ethel Fulcher To Pay Under Federal Laws An Investigator Said He Didn't Know How Much Of $15,402 Was For Porn Magazines, Pop Tarts, Cigarettes And Chewing Gum That Michael Fulcher Also Sold From His Cell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The mother of former Drug Enforcement Administration informant Michael Fulcher must forfeit $20,449 to the federal government for helping her son launder proceeds from his marijuana trafficking inside a state prison. The U.S. District Court jury, which last week convicted Ethel V. Fulcher, ordered the 65-year-old Roanoke County woman Monday to pay the money under federal forfeiture laws enacted to take profit out of crime. Del Crowell, a state Department of Corrections investigator, testified at Monday's hearing that he had traced about $66,000 in inmate money orders going out of Bland Correctional Center from 1995 to 1997 to Michael Fulcher and his drug-dealing accomplices. Only $15,402 of that amount went to the Fulchers, and Crowell admitted to defense attorney David Baugh that he didn't know how much of that was for the porn magazines, Pop Tarts, cigarettes and chewing gum that Fulcher also sold from his cell "store box." Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Mott countered that any money order payments that mixed legal proceeds with the illegal still could be forfeited under a legal principle called commingling. Mott asked the jury for the full amount, claiming Ethel Fulcher as a member of the money-laundering conspiracy was "jointly and severally liable for what the other conspirators do." Despite the $66,000 claim, U.S. District Judge Jackson Kiser limited the amount the jury could consider forfeiting to $49,953, the sum Mott alleged in the indictment. Ethel Fulcher still faces prison time when she is sentenced later this year. She and Fulcher's wife, Rosanna Sue Nichols, were found guilty Friday of conspiring to launder money -- defined as the attempt to conceal drug proceeds or use the proceeds to promote more drug deals. They were acquitted, however, of conspiring to sell marijuana, a verdict that barred prosecutors from seeking to have forfeited Ethel Fulcher's Plantation Road home. Michael Fulcher, 40, was convicted of both conspiracy charges and continuing a criminal enterprise, sometimes referred to as being a drug kingpin. He faces life in prison at his sentencing. What landed him in Bland was a 48-year sentence for various theft convictions in Bedford County. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto