FBI Informant Poses As Drug Trafficker's Attorney

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Suspected drug lord duped

By Todd Cooper

Omaha World Herald

More than 30 times this year, investigators say, Shannon Williams orchestrated a multimillion-dollar marijuana ring from inside the Douglas County Jail.
In one-on-one sessions with a jail visitor, Williams would use the visitor's cell phone to call associates and instruct them on how to divvy up the gobs of marijuana and money his operation was taking in.
He would confide in the visitor about his past exploits, claiming he had earned $15 million to $20 million while operating the marijuana ring in Omaha. He would ask the visitor to launder the money he was making. And he would use the visitor's cell phone to try to arrange hits: one to beat up his longtime defense attorney and another to “put a few into the back” of an Omaha man who had been messing with Williams' girlfriend.
All the while, the visitor would take it in, nodding and promising to follow Williams' orders.

The inmate: Shannon Williams, 42, charged with conspiracy, money laundering and criminal forfeiture.

The girlfriend: Deshawn Hernandez, 29, charged with conspiracy and money laundering.

The initial informants: Steve Kisseberth, 45, and Richard Conway, 36, who have not been charged in this case.

The attorney turned informant: Terry L. Haddock, 52, of Omaha.

The alleged associates: Christopher Parrott, 29, and brother Anthony Parrott, 27, Vicki Cass, age unavailable, Sara Jarrett, 30, Amy Griffith, 33, Daniel Bouquet, 51, Jamie Ackerly, 39, and wife Yvonne Ackerly, 35, all of Omaha; Joe Mark Felix of Phoenix, all of whom are charged with conspiracy. Christopher Parrott, Cass and Jarrett also are charged with money laundering.
Turns out that jailhouse visitor was no friend, no ally, no dutiful worker. He was a government informant.
And here's the jaw dropper: He was a lawyer — an Omaha attorney who Williams says was representing him.
His name: Terry L. Haddock.
The revelation of whom the government was using as its informant not only rocked Williams, it shocked some legal observers. Several veteran attorneys say they have never heard of the federal government using a private lawyer to glean information from an inmate.
The U.S. attorney for Nebraska and at least one legal expert say investigators were on solid legal ground.
But others expressed concerns about whether the use of the attorney amounted to entrapment or possibly violated Williams' attorney-client privilege — and whether the resulting indictments of Williams and 10 others are the proverbial fruit of a poisonous tree.
“Put it this way, I'm not surprised the government wanted to do it,” said Omaha attorney D.C. “Woody” Bradford, in his 42nd year of practicing law. “But I'm shocked that an attorney was willing to do it.”
In a flurry of filings and letters from the jail, Williams, a 42-year-old street-savvy convict, said he, too, was floored.
“An FBI (informant) posing as my attorney!!!” Williams wrote. “I still can't believe it!”
The hard-to-believe story — complete with hit lists, a skinhead, two men who have been acquitted of murders, cars packed with drugs, hidden GPS devices and a defendant walking naked through an Arizona park — sounds like an episode of the former HBO series “The Wire.”
But make no mistake, court records and testimony show, this is real — all the way down to the Omaha attorney who for some reason was willing to wear a wire and risk his career, and even his life.
The following account of the allegations against Williams and 10 others is based on court documents and the testimony of Bellevue Police Officer John Stuck, a lead investigator in the case.
* * *
The investigation began with a traffic stop in Illinois.
About 8 a.m. Oct. 5, 2008, the Illinois State Patrol pulled over a U-Haul speeding east on Interstate 80. When the driver began acting skittish, the trooper called for a drug dog.
The dog sniffed out 329 pounds of marijuana. Troopers confronted the driver, Steve Kisseberth. He agreed to cooperate.
Kisseberth, 45, and an Omaha man, Richard Conway, 36, told investigators the group had been running 300 to 400 pounds of marijuana from Phoenix to Omaha every three weeks since July 2007. Kisseberth said he had joined in a handful of times — and the group had decided to truck some of the pot farther east on I-80 during the October 2008 trip.
Kisseberth told of the group's normal routine: He would fly to Phoenix, where he was provided with a vehicle packed with pot and bearing Arizona plates. He then would drive to Denver, where the pot was switched to a truck with Nebraska plates.
“They liked to have trucks that had that state's license plates so as not to attract suspicion,” Stuck said.
Investigators also discovered that New Mexico police, during a traffic stop, had found $145,000 in cash in a car rented by Omaha resident Christopher Parrott, one of Williams' alleged accomplices.
Then in January 2009, Williams was arrested after residents reported he was walking naked through a park in Peoria, Ariz. Police found 10 bales of marijuana, weighing 297 pounds, inside his house. They also found someone else in the house: James Hatten, an Omahan who was acquitted in a 1996 murder in rural Douglas County.
Williams gave Arizona authorities a fake name, posted an $8,000 bond and fled to Minnesota.
At that point, Stuck approached Haddock. It's unclear what prompted the drug investigator to try to use the attorney. However, Stuck testified that he knew Williams had paid Haddock $8,000 to represent Conway after his indictment over the marijuana found in Illinois.
Haddock then provided Stuck with Williams' cell phone number — a number that Stuck traced to Minnesota. Soon after, Stuck arrested Williams and brought him back to the Douglas County Jail for violating his supervised release from a 1993 crack-dealing conviction.
While Stuck tracked down Williams, a multistate drug task force had begun tracking the group's vehicles. At night, investigators would sneak up to the group's parked cars and attach GPS devices to them. In turn, the investigators used computer software to track the cars as one left Omaha and another left Phoenix, until both met in Denver.
Sometimes officers would pull over the cars and get the occupants to fess up. Other times, they would let them off with a warning for a traffic violation.
Either way, Stuck said, investigators were collecting names of drug runners on the outside.
* * *
Now they just needed someone on the inside.
This past summer, Stuck said, he asked Haddock if the attorney would agree to be outfitted with a recording device and meet with Williams at the Douglas County Jail. Attorneys are typically the only visitors allowed to meet face to face with inmates, and jailers aren't allowed to listen in on those meetings.
“Mr. Williams had asked Terry Haddock to bring a phone up to him,” Stuck testified. “He wanted the freedom, through Mr. Haddock, to … be able to do the operations without the recording of the phones inside the jail.”
Haddock agreed. Soon, he and the wire were witness to a vast conspiracy. In more than 30 meetings at the jail, Williams would use Haddock's phone to speak to suppliers “Flaco” and “Javi” in Arizona. Williams would direct the movement of thousands of pounds of marijuana.
And Williams would quash beefs. In August, Parrott became worried because, Stuck said, Parrott had stolen a “ticket” from Flaco. A ticket is more than 1,000 pounds of marijuana worth more than $1 million.
Williams told Parrott to get a safe and pack it with pot and money. He then ordered the others to throw away their cell phones so Flaco couldn't trace their whereabouts.
While Williams reassured the group he would find a new supplier, he was telling Flaco that someone had stolen the pot from Parrott.
He then gave Haddock orders. He asked the attorney to go to Parrott and to Williams' girlfriend, Deshawn Hernandez, to retrieve cash.
In turn, authorities gave Haddock more ammunition. They had him set up a corporation, called Mango Creek Properties, in which he could launder the drug money.
Under Williams' instruction, Haddock then took more than $80,000 from Parrott and Hernandez and placed it into Mango Creek's accounts.
Williams' requests grew bolder. On Nov. 13, Williams told Haddock he wanted to give $2,000 to an inmate — a white supremacist named Jason “Skin” Hawthorne — to beat up Williams' longtime defense attorney, Steve Lefler.
Williams then made a call to Hatten, who has not been indicted, and talked about an Omaha man who had been around Williams' girlfriend and children.
Williams wanted “to put a few in his back,” Stuck testified, “to let him know he was disrespected.”
Soon after, Haddock alerted authorities to the threats against Lefler and the other man. Neither man was harmed.
By mid-December, the conspiracy had unraveled into 11 indictments, with more possibly coming. Haddock, meanwhile, has told others he is in the witness protection program.
* * *
Attorneys wasted no time trying to attack the constitutionality of investigators' use of Haddock. At a detention hearing last week, Williams' court-appointed attorney, Michael Tasset, grilled Stuck — asking if Haddock had been paid or what “incentive Haddock was getting to assist the government.”
U.S. Magistrate Judge F.A. Gossett III cut off that line of questioning, saying it was irrelevant at a detention hearing.
The taped conversations “may be suppressible at a trial,” the judge said. “They may not be.”
Williams said he had retained Haddock for several matters, including a lawsuit Williams filed to try to expose disparities in crack cocaine sentencings.
Stuck disputed that.
“In the very first (jail) contact with Mr. Williams, Mr. Haddock explained that he is not his attorney and would not do any legal work for him at all,” Stuck testified. “Mr. Williams understood.”
At this point, little is known about why Haddock, 52, chose to get involved. A nontraditional student, he graduated from the University of Nebraska at Omaha with a perfect GPA in 1998. He then graduated from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Law School in 2001 and later joined the Omaha law firm of Raynor, Rensch and Pfeiffer. Haddock is no longer with the firm and hasn't been for months.
Haddock has had marital and financial problems in the past two years. Court records list credit card debts of $28,000 and $22,000.
His wife filed for divorce in 2008. The couple have several grown daughters.
Williams, who was acquitted in the 1993 murder of an Omaha man, said Haddock's “betrayal” has left him unsure whom to trust. At last week's hearing, Williams could be overheard asking if his new attorney “was an undercover agent, too.” Williams and the others face 10 years to life in prison if convicted.
“Not for Al Qaeda or John Gotti has the federal government stooped so low,” Williams wrote to The World-Herald. “Posing as a criminal attorney to get a defendant to talk ‘freely' of his criminal past screams of entrapment and will turn the U.S. justice system on its ear if this is allowed to happen.”

Contact the writer:
444-1275, [email protected]

http://www.omaha.com/article/20100103/NEWS01/701039903/1009
 
That's just wrong. I don't understand how that is legal at all. The article did mention here that, “In the very first (jail) contact with Mr. Williams, Mr. Haddock explained that he is not his attorney and would not do any legal work for him at all,” Stuck testified. “Mr. Williams understood.”. Meaning that Mr. Haddock wasn't his attorney. It's still fucking low though.
 
Published Sunday January 10, 2010

Lawyer goes into hiding

By Todd Cooper

WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

To his friends and former colleagues, this is the extent of Terry L. Haddock's existence today:
A voice on a speakerphone. A voice that echoes with both resolve and resignation.
In measured words, the Omaha attorney confides that he is in hiding after he wore a wire to help the U.S. government indict inmate Shannon E. Williams and 10 others in a massive marijuana conspiracy.
I realize I could lose my law license over this, his friends have recalled him saying in recent weeks. But, please, don't jump to conclusions.


Williams talked about committing crimes, about eliminating witnesses. I had to do something.
And that's it. Just as quickly as he tantalizes former colleagues, he shuts down — saying federal prosecutors have asked him not to talk about why he chose to risk his legal career, even his life, by taking on the marijuana ring and its alleged kingpin.
In a case that will hinge in large part on Haddock's credibility, here's what Haddock doesn't always divulge: His involvement in the federal investigation came after a yearlong stretch in which his personal and professional lives began to circle the drain.
Law enforcement officials close to the investigation say Haddock, 52, became enthralled with a 23-year-old woman from Zimbabwe who describes herself as a former escort. His wife filed for divorce. Credit card debt mounted. He was hospitalized for health problems and later treated for mental health problems. He stopped answering his phone, meeting with clients or showing up for court.
Then the federal government came calling, offering the man who friends say “hates drugs” and “hates drama” a front-row seat to both.
Haddock began wearing a wire and smuggling a cell phone into the Douglas County Jail to witness Williams orchestrate the movement of marijuana and money from Phoenix to Omaha.
“They got the perfect guy,” said an Omaha attorney, a former Haddock colleague who spoke on condition of anonymity. “You have to understand with Terry — if he concluded something was right, he was going to continue to pursue it, no matter how futile the fight.
“In his world, there's good and bad — and he was going to do good. He's just one of those guys who, rightly or wrongly, sees everything in black and white.”
* * *
Scottsbluff attorney Maren Chaloupka doesn't remember the black-and-white nature of Haddock. She remembers the white.
“To me, he was a nondescript, middle-aged white guy,” Chaloupka said.
Chaloupka worked with Haddock briefly in 2004 when the two attorneys jointly filed a lawsuit against the Omaha Public Schools on behalf of a student who got kicked out of Burke High School. Chaloupka eventually took over the case. She said she was floored when she recently heard of Haddock's undercover work.
“He certainly didn't strike me as the kind of guy who would take on a bona fide bad (guy),” she said. “He just seemed like a milquetoast sort of guy.”
At the time of his involvement in this case, Haddock was just seven years into what had been a relatively benign legal career.
A nontraditional student, the Columbus, Neb., native graduated from the University of Nebraska at Omaha with a perfect 4.0 GPA in 1998. He then graduated from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law in 2001, received his law license in Colorado in 2002 and Nebraska in 2003, and joined the Omaha law firm of Raynor, Rensch & Pfeiffer.
At the small firm — its Web site lists fewer than 10 attorneys — Haddock handled “whatever he brought in the door,” a former colleague said.
Divorces. Child custody. Immigration. Drunken driving.
Other than his filing of the lawsuit against OPS, he made news when he and a neighbor engaged in a running dispute over the neighbor's loud music and brash behavior.
He later filed a defamation lawsuit over that squabble, claiming an Omaha man's false statements caused “mental and physical harm” to him, including hospitalizations and medical expenses of more than $2,500. The case was dismissed after a couple of years.
Colleagues describe Haddock as a “bulldog” who worked hard and long for his clients.
“He was pretty persistent, pretty effective,” said a longtime Omaha attorney. “He wasn't afraid to pick up the phone and get things done before it got to the courtroom.”
At times, colleagues said, he worked too hard — obsessing over and appealing judges' rulings that didn't go his way.
“He would put an extraordinary amount of effort into something that should have been a tenth of the time,” said another attorney who spoke on condition of anonymity. “He just wasted a lot of time on stinkers that he should have walked away from.”
* * *
In 2008, Haddock did walk away.
From his wife of 30 years. From his cases. From his practice.
His pursuit, according to two law enforcement officials close to the investigation: Nyasha Muchegwa, the 23-year-old immigrant from Zimbabwe.
Haddock became enamored of the former nursing assistant who advertised herself on the Internet as an “escort,” the officials said.
In an interview, Muchegwa said she met Haddock at the Nebraska Furniture Mart. He noticed her accent and asked where she was from. The two struck up a friendship, she said.
Over time, she said, Haddock provided great help to her family on immigration matters and to her on a DUI and a couple of other misdemeanors.
She said that she didn't have an affair with him — that there was “nothing sensual, nothing ungodly” about their relationship. She views him as “family, like a brother or cousin,” she said.
Her account was different in a November 2008 sworn deposition about a crime she witnessed.
Prosecutor Michael Jensen — who said he was curious about Haddock's zealous representation of Muchegwa — asked about their relationship.
Jensen: “Prior to Mr. Haddock becoming your attorney, did you ever have any relationship with him?”
Muchegwa: “No I didn't … he's more of a friend.”
Jensen: “And did you ever see Mr. Haddock on more than just a friendship basis?”
Muchegwa: “At one point, yes, I did.”
Jensen: “Was that prior to him becoming your attorney?”
Muchegwa: “That was prior.”
Jensen: “Has that ever happened since he's become your attorney?”
Muchegwa: “No.”
Whatever the relationship, Haddock was involved in Muchegwa's world. And any time Muchegwa was in trouble, the attorney wasn't far behind.
In May 2008, she was pulled over for not having a front license plate on her car. Officers ticketed her for that and for driving under suspension. They then arrested her on a misdemeanor warrant.
But before they could book her into jail, Haddock was at her side. Haddock offered to have her talk to investigators about another crime.
Then came Oct. 5, 2008. Illinois state troopers pulled over a U-Haul speeding on Interstate 80 and discovered 329 pounds of marijuana inside.
With the driver's cooperation, agents followed the U-Haul to Omaha to try to round up others involved.
Soon, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Omaha filed a marijuana conspiracy charge against Steve Kisseberth, John Oglesby, Richard Conway and one woman: Nyasha Muchegwa.
That night, Muchegwa had gone with Conway to the SuperTarget near 132nd Street and West Maple Road. Conway got out of the car and headed toward the U-Haul. Agents then watched Muchegwa drive away and park near the Dairy Queen — facing the U-Haul.
“Based on the actions observed of Muchegwa,” a federal drug agent wrote, “affiant believes that she was acting as a lookout for Conway.”
Within a day, Haddock rode to Muchegwa's rescue — albeit reluctantly. On Oct. 6, 2008, Haddock told Muchegwa he wouldn't represent her unless she paid him. She told him where to find cash in her northwest Omaha apartment.
While searching for the cash, Omaha police reports say, Haddock found a gun under Muchegwa's bed and unloaded it. He found a small baggie of marijuana and flushed it down the toilet.
Soon after, he turned over the gun to police and took Muchegwa to the U.S. Attorney's Office to tell her story. Muchegwa told prosecutors that she had just begun dating Conway and that she didn't know anything about the conspiracy or what was going on that night.
On Oct. 21, 2008, federal prosecutors dismissed charges against Muchegwa and another Omaha resident.
* * *
As it turned out, that traffic stop in Illinois — and the resulting cooperation of Conway and Kisseberth — helped launch the investigation into Williams and 10 others.
And it brought Haddock into the case to briefly represent both Muchegwa and Conway.
After charges were filed, investigators say, Williams paid Haddock $8,000 to represent Conway.
It was in the course of those discussions that Williams, who was acquitted of a 1993 murder, started talking about eliminating witnesses, Haddock has told others.
Haddock told friends he had to act. Federal prosecutors won't say what led them to make the bold move of having Haddock wear a wire to record their conversations. Nor have they said whether the government is paying Haddock to work as an informant.
One thing is clear: Haddock's constant presence around Muchegwa gave investigators access to an attorney who was diligent — and increasingly desperate.
Haddock's wife had filed for divorce in July 2008. About the same time, Haddock essentially stopped meeting with clients or going to court.
In a 2008 case, Haddock put up no defense for a client accused of breaking a woman's leg by ramming her with a car. When he and the client continually failed to appear to contest the lawsuit, Sarpy County District Judge David Arterburn slapped Haddock's client with a $250,000 judgment.
Soon after, Haddock submitted an affidavit saying he was solely at fault for mishandling the case. Haddock wrote that he was hospitalized for physical issues; court documents indicate he told others he suffers from Crohn's disease and severe depression.
He wrote that his “physical and mental health continued to deteriorate throughout the summer and fall months of 2008, that he became unable to manage normal day-to-day activities,” according to a judge's summary. “He states that, at some point, he stopped answering his phone, stopped opening his mail, stopped managing his files.”
Haddock, who eventually left Raynor, Rensch & Pfeiffer, put it this way in his affidavit: “I withdrew from everything and everyone.”
He entered into mental health treatment in February 2009.
Investigators began outfitting him with a wire a couple of months later.
Now the man who was at the center of the investigation is sure to be in the crosshairs in court. Nothing about Haddock or his credibility will go unexamined as attorneys seek to throw out more than 30 tapes of meetings between Haddock and Williams.
Haddock isn't talking to reporters.
Williams is.
In a jailhouse interview last week, Williams said he is convinced that Haddock became involved to curry favor for Muchegwa.
“He went undercover to get her out of trouble,” Williams said. “I wish I had an attorney like that.”
Muchegwa calls that ludicrous. She noted that her charges were dismissed in October 2008 — several months before Haddock began wearing a wire.
“There was no reason for him to do it for me — my case was already dropped,” she said. “I have no idea why he did what he did.
“Only God knows.”

Contact the writer: 444-1275, [email protected]

http://www.omaha.com/article/20100110/NEWS01/701109912
 
I hope this case sets precedent protecting the rights of the accused. Regardless of the acts perpetrated by the defendant, he deserves an actual lawyer, not an FBI informant.

This is nothing more than taking advantage of a prisoner who has less than adequate legal expertise. Defendants should not have to worry about sorting out the law. They should have a fucking lawyer to do it for them. They should be advised by an actual lawyer working for *them* of the ins and outs of confidentiality. Not be lied to by a FBI informant who was obviously acting like the defendants lawyer.

There is no way this guy would have been dumb enough to believe some white guy kept showing up to be his friend. He was misled into thinking Haddock was his lawyer, pure and simple.
 
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