Pubdate: Wed, 8 Sept 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, Staff Writer 4 COPS PLEAD NOT GUILTY TO LYING, PLANTING DRUG EVIDENCE Four Miami-Dade Police officers accused of telling lies and planting evidence went to court Tuesday to plead not guilty -- and to keep their pictures out of the newspaper and off television. Three narcotics detectives and their supervisor -- Officers Hector J. Llevat, 25, Andre B. Vaughn, 37, and Florencio Boucourt, 31, and Sgt. Jose J. Diaz, 36 -- were arrested last month after allegedly lying during sworn statements. Prosecutors say the four confiscated drugs from two women who had bought pills and marijuana from a small-time dealer working out of a Kendall townhouse. Prosecutors say the officers let the women go but planted their drugs on someone else. The officers face a variety of charges, including false imprisonment, perjury and official misconduct. Now they say their lives are at risk, because their addresses and booking photos were released to the media. One officer claims someone has been driving past his house at night. Others complained of unsolicited visits from reporters. Circuit Judge Victoria Platzer granted a motion by Llevat's attorneys C. Michael Cornely and Doug Hartman asking that the officers' home addresses and Social Security numbers be deleted from their court files. She also ordered the media to quit broadcasting the detectives' mug shots -- photos the lawyers say were illegally released and could endanger the undercover detectives. "Releasing these pictures is really dangerous," said Boucourt's attorney, Richard Sharpstein. "A drug dealer they investigated could be watching TV and say, `Hey, that's Louie' -- or whatever the undercover name was. Then they could come here, read his court file and find out where he lives." Florida law exempts police officers' personal addresses from public records laws. Herald General Counsel Sam Terilli said deleting addresses and Social Security numbers from public court records goes along with Florida law, but the rest of the judge's order is unconstitutional. The newspaper, he said, plans to challenge it. "They can't tell us not to publish something," Terilli said. "First of all, we don't publish police officers' addresses and Social Security numbers. Pictures of officers who are accused of a crime and are on trial? That's another thing. Their cover has been blown." NBC 6 News Director Ramon Escobar said the order makes no sense because the pictures have been broadcast. "Why would we treat police officers differently from any other person?" said Escobar, who was unfamiliar with the judge's order. "On the surface, that sounds ridiculous. The question isn't whether we are going to air the pictures or not. The larger issue is whether we have the right to air it. It bothers me if we are asked to hold cops to a different standard." - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto