The Great Fake-Drugs Scandal (update 2/23/05)

fruitfly

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The Great Fake-Drugs Scandal

This is a cover-your-ass world. Everybody has an excuse. Nothin' ain't nobody's fault, never. The only antidote to c.y.a. is the phrase c.y.a. artists fear most – "on your watch." As in, "It doesn't matter how many layers of deniability you wrap around your big rear end. If it happened on your watch, you're takin' the hit."

That was exactly the principle behind two high-profile demotions in the Dallas Police Department last week.

This all had to do with the city's fake-drugs scandal of 2001, in which police and prosecutors were found sending innocent people to prison on counterfeit drug evidence. Assistant police Chief Dora Saucedo-Falls, who was the department's highest-ranking Hispanic, had responsibility for narcotics as well as other divisions during the time of the fake-drugs scandal. Chief David Kunkle demoted her last week to lieutenant and moved her to communications.

Deputy Chief John Martinez, who reported to Saucedo-Falls, had immediate responsibility for narcotics. Martinez came to that post after the fake-drugs scandal was already under way. He retired last week rather than accept a demotion.

I tried to reach Saucedo-Falls and Martinez last week but was not successful.

Neither Saucedo-Falls nor Martinez was accused by the chief of having done anything deliberate to cause the fake-drugs scandal. It was entirely a matter of what they didn't do to prevent or stop it.

Kunkle says knocking people down for what they did not do, rather than for what they did, is a hard call: "I struggled with what to do. It certainly was not an easy decision."

He says he is aware you could look at the roles of these two top officers in a slightly different way and come to a very different conclusion:

"Both with Chief Falls and Chief Martinez, you can tell the story in a way that their role was minimal. You can tell the story of their failure to see the warning signs and take action quicker in a way that you could hold them not accountable for what happened.

"But the other side of that is that we now have four officers indicted. I think it was 20-plus people who were innocent who were arrested and charged with selling and possessing drugs. And ultimately you had a failure of management supervision."

The eye-opening part of this saga is in the fake-drugs report published last October by the independent investigative panel chartered by the city council to examine why the fake-drugs scandal happened. Kunkle says it was his reading and re-reading of the report that convinced him something had to change.

I went back to the fake-drugs report myself to see what Kunkle was looking at. The authors, lawyers Terence J. Hart and Lena Levario, had conducted a lengthy investigation not aimed at assigning criminal blame: That was the portfolio of a separate investigation set up by District Attorney Bill Hill, which is still under way and still producing indictments.

Hart and Levario were exploring the questions: How did this happen? What do the people in charge of narcotics say when you ask them why innocent people were sent to prison on their watch, based on drug evidence that turned out to be pool-cue chalk instead of cocaine?

The most telltale response for me was from Saucedo-Falls. Saucedo-Falls told the investigative panel that she first learned of the scandal in her area of responsibility a full two months after the first laboratory evidence came back showing that police had been making cases based on counterfeit evidence.

That's not the bad part.

And remember what this case was about. Someone was manufacturing fake cocaine, bundling it up in plastic to look like drugs and then planting it on innocent people. The arrests were made using a gang of confidential informants or snitches who were so untrustworthy to begin with that detectives had been ordered on several occasions to stop using them – orders that were ignored.

Narcotics detectives were paying these informants hundreds of thousands of dollars in snitch money – sums barely accounted for on scraps of paper in a junk-pile accounting system.

More to the point: Honest, hardworking heads of Mexican immigrant families were uprooted from their lives and sent to prison for crimes they had not committed. It's hard to imagine a more brutal injustice than that.

I can still see the face of little Yesenia Mejia, then 12, when I talked to her about the time her father had been in prison. Jesus Mejia, 42, a self-employed carburetor mechanic, was arrested in May 2001 and sent to prison on fake drug evidence.

I spoke to the whole family at a lawyer's office after Mejia was released. Yesenia told me she didn't want to visit her father while he was in prison, and I asked why. Her face crumpled, and tears sprang from her eyes.

"I didn't want to see my dad like that," she said.

Let's not lose sight of that part.

So we get to late November 2001, when Saucedo-Falls had to know about the scandal, because Martinez had requested an investigation by the police department's Internal Affairs Unit – a request that had to go through Saucedo-Falls, presumably leaving some kind of paper trail, a dated document or documents with Saucedo-Falls' signature or initials on them.

Saucedo-Falls told the investigative panel that she still did not learn any details of the allegations, because on hearing from Martinez there was some kind of an issue, she ordered Martinez to go tell then-police Chief Terrell Bolton about it. And she didn't ask to go along.

"Even though the allegations involved personnel under her command," the fake-drugs report says, "she demonstrated a reluctance to investigate matters as she failed to inquire into the specifics of the allegations and did not accompany Deputy Chief Martinez to brief Chief Bolton."

Sweet. So some day when they come along with that famous investigative question – "What did you know, and when did you know it?" – you can honestly say, "I didn't know anything. Ever. Talk to Chief Martinez."

By removing her from her position – and these are my words and interpretation, not his – Chief Kunkle was saying that any top manager with an excuse that good deserves not to be a top manager anymore.

I think that's a doctrine that could really wreak havoc at City Hall, if it were generally and forcefully applied: All personnel with really good excuses for what took place today please report immediately to the out-placement bureau in human resources. Boy, they'd be linin' up all the way down the hall.

Of the two top cops, Martinez is the more difficult case, because he came to narcotics after the fake-drugs scandal was well under way. In fact, the fake-drugs report reveals something that hasn't gained a lot of attention yet – that the bones of the fake-drugs scandal, the basic behaviors that made it possible, may go back at least as far as the early 1990s under the regime of former Chief William Rathburn, and probably go back even further.

Hart and Levario, the fake-drugs investigators, dug out of the department a heretofore secret report on possible misconduct in the narcotics unit dated June 18, 1992. Amazingly, many of the same sloppy practices dealing with the use and payment of confidential informants – almost a carbon copy of findings in the 2001 fake-drugs scandal – were turned up by investigators in 1992.

And this: Many of the same cops working in narcotics in 1992 were still there during the 2001 scandal.

Martinez tried to do something, sort of. When he learned that one group of confidential informants was involved in all of the fake-drugs cases, he ordered the narcotics officers under his command to stop using them. Here's the problem: They defied him.

He ordered them to stop using the bad snitches. They kept using the bad snitches. He found out they were defying him. Nothing happened.

He has a story about why nothing happened. He told the investigators that by the time he was really absolutely sure they were still using the bad snitches, the particular lieutenant he had ordered not to use them had been promoted to a rank equal to Martinez. So at that point Martinez couldn't tell the guy what to do.

Pretty weak.

And here's the reality that emerges from all of this: There was an entrenched cadre of cops in narcotics, some of whom had developed their own way of doing things over the years. Not everybody in narcotics by any means. Another thing that emerges from the fake-drugs report is that there was another cadre of cops in narcotics who were straight, who went by the book and did what was right. That's a theme in almost all of the problems the department has suffered in the last few years: Somewhere in there, out of the limelight and quietly laboring away, there has always been a core of decent, honest cops with integrity who did what they were supposed to do, even if nobody was watching them.

But you had the loosey-goosey guys, too. And they had friends. And it went up the ladder. Maybe all the way up.

So if you, John Martinez, come in late in the day when the game is already under way, it will take a whole lot of fortitude to blow the whistle. You have to assume you may be the one taking the bullet, not the bad guys, and that's a tough chance to take.

Not an easy thing. You can look at my business, at all the plagiarism and lying scandals that have rocked major newspapers in recent years: There are journalists whose excuses are so good they could be made into major motion pictures.

The "on your watch" rule is a tough one. That roar you hear in the distance is the glory and the terror of a whole new day dawning at the Dallas P.D.
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The Great Fake-Drugs Scandal
Innocent people sent to prison with evidence manufactured by narcotics officers. That couldn't happen ... could it?

By Jim Schutze, Dallas Observer.
Posted December 2, 2004.

Link
 
Fuck the police, all of them.
I would rather protect myself and my property with a 12 gauge than having to submit to "protection" from corrupt cops. These people should be fucking JAILED, not demoted, jesus christ.

Absolute power corrupts absolutely, and I am absolutely sick of these cunts. The poor bastards who get framed spend time locked up, who fucking knows how many times this was done and not detected previously... and the cunts get demoted.

I would like to stomp the dicks of each officer responsible, wether they actively participated in the framing or just watched silently. Those who have the power to stop injustice and let it happen are scum like the rest.

I swear to god, I lose more faith in humanity every day. Thanks, Bluelight! :p

Anyways, good article and quote FF. Sorry if I'm out of line, but this kind of shit makes me want to vomit.
 
You mean these poor guys got busted because narcs planted fake dope on them? and they went to jail for that? what kind of law enforcement is that? honestly, this is by far the most outrageous thing I have ever heard of... wow..
 
Professional ignorance?

Try despicable amoral maliciousness. Where the fuck do you get ignorance from?
 
I got framed by a cop last year. I had a capsule of 2ci that i made myself from a chemical company... and a few months later i got charges in the mail for posessing cocaine.

It really pisses me off, almost daily. I haven't had a trial yet.
 
It scares me that this happens, even in Ammerica where almost anything is possible. I think its a general trend in todays society to assume peoples guilt before even considering the facts. The scary thing is that the people responsible never seem to see the side of the law they really deserve. I say throw them in jail, not demote the immoral slugs!! Maybe they will meet some of the nice people they sent away for being law abiding citizens while they are in there.......
 
at least in the UK they use real drugs for fucks sake!

stupid fuckers getting caught. thank god most cops are dipshit thick and only wear the uniform to offset potency problems.;)
 
UPDATE

Fake Drug Cases Settled in Dallas
Dallas Morning News
February 23, 2005

Dallas has agreed to pay about $5.6 million to settle most of the federal lawsuits stemming from the police fake-drug scandal, said several people familiar with the deals.

The settlement includes 16 of the 24 plaintiffs who have filed lawsuits alleging that narcotics officers and their supervisors violated their civil rights in the series of 2001 arrests in which paid police informants planted bogus drugs on innocent people.

City Attorney Madeleine Johnson, who has supervised the settlement talks and is expected to announce the settlements today, could not be reached for comment.

The cost to dispose of the cases before trial would be one of the largest legal payments by the city in recent memory. The city agreed several years ago to pay $5.5 million after several police supervisors sued after demotions by former Chief Terrell Bolton.

The cost of the fake-drug cases could grow if the remaining plaintiffs settle or win claims before juries.

"This is a great start to closing the chapter and putting the litigation behind everyone," said plaintiffs attorney Don Tittle, who got agreements for 12 of his 19 clients but declined to disclose the amounts.

"But it's not over until the city decides to address the remaining cases of the other victims," he said. "Until those cases are resolved, the city still faces some tremendous financial exposure."

The settlements, which were partially revealed last month, are no surprise. Two lawyers hired by the city to investigate the scandal released a scathing report stating that poor police supervision and shoddy detective work in the department's narcotics division led to the false arrests.

Those arrests fit a pattern in which a cadre of corrupt informants hired by narcotics officers planted bundles of a white powder, sometimes billiards chalk, on immigrants, most of whom were Hispanic. That led detectives to make false felony arrests.

Three informants went to federal prison for the scheme. They and others also face related criminal charges in state court.

Several former narcotics officers are accused of evidence tampering related to police reports. The detective at the center of the arrests, former Senior Cpl. Mark Delapaz, is scheduled to go on trial Feb. 28.

No official has alleged that officers knowingly jailed innocent people.

Sources said the settlement payouts to specific plaintiffs varied greatly, from about $100,000 to nearly $500,000.

Some of the falsely arrested, for example, spent little time in jail.

Others languished for months during the summer and fall of 2001 until sophisticated lab tests revealed that the cocaine and methamphetamine evidence in their cases was all or mostly billiards chalk.

"There was a plan depending on what your damages were," said Tony Wright, another plaintiffs attorney who settled all four of his cases.

Some of the pending federal lawsuits might never be settled. Wright and others said city lawyers seemed less inclined to settle cases in which the individuals had criminal histories.

Johnson said last month that the city wouldn't pay plaintiffs who she believes weren't "innocent victims."

"It is not our plan to give money to people who were involved in drug deals," she said.

That comment drew an angry response from another plaintiff's attorney, Marc Lenahan. His client, Jaime Chavez, went to prison in a real methamphetamine case in 2000 based on the testimony of the same informant who masterminded the fake-drug scheme.

That informant later admitted that he lied, and Chavez was freed in October 2002, but not before his wife and children had moved to Arizona to start a new life.

"It is a fiction that the city is perpetuating that the problem was fake drugs," Lenahan said Thursday, still hoping for a "fair" settlement but prepared to go to trial. "The city didn't handle its informants correctly."

At least two of the remaining fake-drug plaintiffs had previous narcotics arrests, so it's unclear whether Johnson was referring to Chavez.

Still, Lenahan plans to file a defamation suit because, he says, she is labeling his client a drug dealer.

The circumstances and timing of other plaintiffs' arrests could conceivably reduce the city's liability before juries, reducing the willingness to settle.

And three of Tittle's clients who went to Mexico after the scandal remain there, complicating their settlement talks.

Link
 
Dallas has agreed to pay about $5.6 million to settle most of the federal lawsuits stemming from the police fake-drug scandal, said several people familiar with the deals.

They should be paying a lot more than that and those responsible should spend some time in prison themselves. I can't imagine anything worse than being imprisoned for no reason.

How many times have similar things gone on without anyone finding out? There are probably hundreds or maybe thousands of people wrongly imprisoned because they have had fake or real drugs planted on them. It would just be so easy to get away with it. It would be impossible to prove that the drugs weren't yours and we all know that you are guilty until proven innocent, especially when it comes to drugs.

I have no respect at all for the police and I cant help but feel good when I hear of a cop being killed while harassing or arresting drug users and dealers. It serves them right!
 
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