Pubdate: Thurs, 9 Sep 1999 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: FRANCES ROBLES, Herald Staff Writer CASE TAINTED, CONVICTION REVERSED A county judge made the rare move Wednesday of tossing out a closed year-old drug case where the defendant had already been found guilty -- because prosecutors now say the suspect was framed by police officers who are themselves now under arrest. The same day Freddy Castro's record was wiped clean, his lawyer sent a letter to Miami-Dade Police demanding $100,000 for false arrest, false imprisonment and violating Castro's civil rights. Castro, 26, was arrested at his Kendall apartment in May last year along with two roommates. Miami-Dade narcotics detectives said Castro had four grams of marijuana tucked under his mattress. Castro pleaded no contest three months later to a misdemeanor drug possession charge and was sentenced to time served. "Freddy believed that if four police officers testified one way, and he testified another, nobody would believe him," said Castro's attorney, Ron Guralnick. "It was a plea of convenience." A full year later, Miami-Dade Police investigators disclosed that they now believe Castro was set up by the very detectives who arrested him. Castro is cleared, but the officers face a variety of criminal charges. Investigators learned that two women had been caught with drugs outside Castro's Kendall Creek apartment minutes before Castro's arrest. The women told police where they purchased their stash, and were let go. Officers went in, allegedly found more drugs, but could not find any linked directly to Castro. Investigators later determined that the detectives took the marijuana confiscated from the two women and planted it under Castro's mattress. "There were three people living in an apartment, but they couldn't associate him with the drugs," Guralnick said. "They thought, `He must be guilty, if he's living in the same apartment with these other people.' " The narcotics team was subsequently arrested last month, charged with false arrest and lying about the case during sworn statements. The three officers and their supervisor -- Andre B. Vaughn, Florencio Boucourt, Hector J. Llevat, and Sgt. Jose Diaz -- vehemently deny the accusations. Based on the new charges against the officers, Miami-Dade County Judge Kevin Emas made the unusual move of allowing Castro to withdraw his plea Wednesday. Then he threw the case out. Prosecutors did not object. "It's all undone," said Edward Griffith, personal assistant to Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle. "To go back and undo a conviction is pretty unusual, but we had no problem with it." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck