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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Drug Laws: Presumed Guilty (4/6)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec14.091524.2937@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Mon, 14 Dec 1992 09:15:24 GMT
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-
- CRIME PAYS BIG FOR INFORMANTS IN FORFEITURE DRUG CASES
- PART FOUR - THE INFORMANTS
-
- They snitch at all levels, from the the Hell's Angel whose testimony
- across the country has made him a millionaire, to the Firksville, Mo.,
- informant who worked for the equivalent of a fast-food joint's hourly wage.
-
- They snitch for all reasons, from criminals who do it in return for
- lighter sentences to private citizens motivated by civic-mindedness.
-
- But it's only with the recent boom in forfeiture that paid informants
- began snitching for a hefty cut of the take.
-
- With the spread of forfeiture actions has come a new, and some say,
- problematic, practice: guaranteeing police informants that if their tips result
- in a forfeiture, the informant will get a percentage of the proceeds. And that
- makes crime pay. Big.
-
- The Asset Forfeiture Fund of the U.S. Justice Department last year gave
- $24 million to informants as their share of forfeited items. It has $22 million
- earmarked this year.
-
- While plenty of those payments go to informants who match the stereotype
- of a shady, sinister opportunist, many are average people you could meet on any
- given day in an airport, bus terminal or train station.
-
-
- In fact, if you travel often, you likely have met them whether you knew it
- or not.
-
- Counter clerks notice how people buy tickets. Cash? A one-way trip?
-
- Operators of X-ray machines watch for "suspicious" shadows and not only
- for outlines of weapons, which is what signs at checkpoints say they're
- scanning. They look for money, "suspicious" amounts that can be called to the
- attention of law enforcement and maybe net a reward for the operator.
-
- Police affidavits and court testimony in several cities show clerks for
- large package handlers, including United Parcel Service and Continental
- Airlines' Quik Pak, open "suspicious" packages and alert police to what they
- find. To do the same thing, police would need a search warrant.
-
- ---
-
- UNDERGROUND ECONOMY
-
- At 16 major airports, drug agents, counter and baggage personnel, and
- management reveal an underground economy running off seizures and forfeitures.
-
- All but one of the airports' drug interdiction teams reward private
- employees who pass along reports about suspicious activity. Typically, they get
- 10 percent of the value of whatever is found.
-
- The Greater Pittsburgh International Airport team does not and questions
- the propriety of the practice. Under federal and most states' laws, forfeiture
- proceeds return to the law enforcement agency that builds the case. Those
- agencies also control the rewards of informants.
-
- The arrangement means both police and the informants on whom they rely now
- have a financial incentive to seize a person's goods - a mix that may be too
- intoxicating, says Lt. Norbert Kowalski.
-
- He runs Greater Pitt's joint 11-person Allegheny County
- Police-Pennsylvania State Police interdiction team.
-
- "Obviously, we want all the help we can get in stopping these drug
- traffickers. But having a publicized program that pays airport or airline
- employees to in effect, be whistle-blowers, may be pushing what's proper law
- enforcement to the limit," he says.
-
- He worries that the system might encourage unnecessary random searches.
-
- His team checked passengers arriving from 4,230 flights last year. Yet
- even with its avowed cautious approach, the team stopped 527 people but netted
- only 49 arrests.
-
- At Denver's Stapleton Airport where most of the drug team's cases start
- with informant tips - officers also made 49 arrests last year. But they stopped
- about 2,000 people for questioning, estimates Capt. Rudy Sandoval, commander
- of the city's Vice and Drug Control Bureau.
-
- As Kowalski sees it, the public vests authority in police with the
- expectation they will use it legally and judiciously. The public can't get
- those same assurances with police-designees, like counter clerks, says
- Kowalski.
-
- With money as an inducement, "you run the risk of distorting the system,
- and that can infringe on the rights of innocent travelers. If someone knows
- they can get a good bit of money by turning someone in, then they may imagine
- seeing or hearing things that aren't there. What happens when you get to
- court?"
-
- In Nashville, that's not much of an issue. Juries rarely get to hear from
- informants.
-
- Police who work the airport deliberately delay paying informants until a
- case has been resolved "because we don't want these tipsters to have to
- testify. If we don't pay them until the case is closed they don't have to risk
- going to court," says Capt. Judy Bawcum, commander of the vice division for
- the Nashville Police Department.
-
- That means their motivation can't be questioned.
-
- Bawcum says it may appear that airport informants are working solely for
- the money, but she believes there's more to it. "I admit these (X-ray) guards
- are getting paid less than burger flippers at McDonald's and the promise of 10
- percent of $50,000 or whatever is attractive. But to refuse to help us is not
- a progressive way of thinking," says Bawcum. "This is a public service."
-
- But not all companies share the view that their employees should be public
- servants. Package handling companies and Wackenhut, the X-ray checkpoint
- security firm, refuse to allow Nashville police to use their workers as
- informants.
-
- "They're so fearful a promise of a reward will prompt their people to
- concentrate on looking for drugs and money instead of looking for weapons,"
- says Bawcum.
-
- Far from being uncomfortable with the notion of citizen-cops, Bawcum says
- her department relies on them. "We need airport employees working for us
- because we've only got a very small handful of officers" at the airport, she
- says.
-
- For her, the challenge comes in sustaining enthusiasm, especially when
- federal agencies like the DEA are "way too slow paying out." Civic duty
- carries only so far. "It's hard to keep them watching when they have to wait
- for those rewards. We can't lose that incentive."
-
- ---
-
- THE DEALS
-
- Most drug teams hold tight the details of how their system works and how
- much individual informants earn, preferring to keep their public service
- private.
-
- But in a Denver court case, attorney Alexander DeSalvo obtained
- photocopies of police affidavits about tipsters and copies of three checks
- payable to a Continental airline clerk, Melissa Funner. The cheeks, from the
- U.S. Treasury and Denver County, total $5,834 for the period from September
- 1989 to August 1990.
-
- Ms. Furtner, reached by phone at her home, was flustered by questions
- about the checks.
-
- "What do you want to know about the rewards? I can't talk about any of
- it. It's not something I'm supposed to talk about. I don't feel comfortable
- with this at all." She then hung up.
-
- As hefty as the payments to private citizens can be, they are pin money
- compared to the paychecks drawn by professional informants.
-
- Among the best paid of all: convicted drug dealers and self-confessed
- users.
-
- Anthony Tait, a Hell's Angel and admitted drug user who has been a
- cooperating witness for the FBI since 1985, earned nearly $1 million for
- information he provided between 1985 and 1988, according to a copy of Tait's
- payment schedule and FBI contract obtained by The Pittsburgh Press.
-
- Of his $1 million, $250,000 was his share of the value of assets forfeited
- as a result of his cooperation. His money came from four sources. FBI offices
- in Anchorage and San Francisco; the state of California and the federal
- forfeiture fund.
-
- Likewise, in a November 1990 case in Pittsburgh, the government paid a
- former drug kingpin handsomely.
-
- Testimony shows that Edward Vaughn of suburban San Francisco earned
- $40,000 in salary and expenses between August 1989 and October 1990 working for
- DEA, drew an additional $500 a month from the U.S. Marshal Service and was
- promised a 25 percent cut of any forfeited goods.
-
- Vaughn had run a multimillion-dollar, international drug smuggling ring,
- been a federal fugitive, and twice served prison time before arranging an early
- parole and paid informant deal with the government, he said in court.
-
- As an informant, he said, he preferred arranging deals for drug agents
- that are known as reverse stings: the law enforcement agents pose as sellers
- and the targets bring cash for a buy. Those deals take cash, but not dope,
- directly off the streets. In those stings, he said, the cash would be forfeited
- and Vaughn would get his prearranged quarter-share.
-
- His testimony in Pittsburgh resulted in one man being found guilty of
- conspiracy to distribute marijuana. The jury acquitted the other defendant
- saying they believed Vaughn had entrapped him by pursuing him so aggressively
- to make a dope deal.
-
- ---
-
- TO PAY OR NOT TO PAY
-
- The practice of giving informants a share of forfeited proceeds goes on so
- discreetly that Richard Wintory, an Oklahoma prosecutor and forfeiture
- proponent who until recently headed the National Drug Prosecution Center in
- Alexandria, Va., says, "I'm not aware of any agency that pays commissions on
- forfeited items to informants."
-
- Although the federal forfeiture program funnels millions of dollars to
- informants, it does not set policy at the top about how - or how much - to pay.
-
- "Decisions about how to pursue investigations within the guidelines of
- appropriate and legal behavior are best left to people in the field," says
- George Terwilliger III, the deputy attorney general who heads the Justice
- Department's forfeiture program.
-
- That hands-off approach filters to local offices, such as Pittsburgh,
- where U.S. Attorney Thomas Corbett says the discussion of whether to give
- informants a cut of any take "is a philosophical argument. I won't put myself
- in the middle of it."
-
- The absence of regulations spawns "privateers and junior Gmen," says
- Steven Sherick, a defense attorney in Tucson, Ariz., who recently recovered
- $9,000 for John P. Gray of Rutland, Vt., after a UPS employee found it in a
- package and called police.
-
- Gray, says Sherick, is "an eccentric older guy who doesn't use anything
- but cash." In March 1990, Gray mailed a friend hand-money for a piece of
- Arizona retirement property Gray had scouted during an earlier trip West, say
- court records. The court ordered the money returned because the state couldn't
- prove the cash was gained illegally.
-
- Expanding payments to private citizens, particularly on a sliding scale
- rather than a fixed fee, raises unsavory possibilities, says Eric E. Sterling,
- head of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, a think tank in Washington,
- D.C.
-
- Major racketeers and criminal enterprises were the initial targets of
- forfeiture, but its use has steadily expanded until now it catches people who
- never have been accused of a crime but lose their property anyway.
-
- "You can win a forfeiture case without charging someone," says Sterling.
- "You can win even after they've been acquitted. And now, on top of that, you
- can have informants tailoring their tips to the quality of the thing that
- will be seized.
-
- "What paid informant in their right mind is going to tum over a crack
- house - which may be destroying an inner city neighborhood - when he can tum
- over information about a nice, suburban spread that will pay off big when it
- comes time to get his share?" asks Sterling.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 35 ARRESTED DESPITE BUMBLING WAYS OF INFORMANT
-
- The undercover operation was called BAD. The main informant was named
- Mudd.
-
- And the entire affair was ... a bust.
-
- The prosecutor in Adair County in Missouri's northeast comer chuckles now
- about the "bumbled" investigation.
-
- But Sheri and Matthew Farrell, whose 60-acre farm remains tied up in a
- federal forfeiture action due to the bumbling, can't see the humor.
-
- A paid police informant named Steve R. Mudd, who went undercover for $4.65
- an hour in a marijuana investigation near Kirksville, Mo., accused Farrell of
- selling and cultivating marijuana on his land. Mudd was the only witness in the
- joint city-county drug investigation called Operation BAD - Bust a Dealer.
-
- For a year starting in November 1989, Mudd worked for city and county
- police identifying alleged dealers around Firksville, population 17,000. He
- received "buy money" and would return after his deals - minus the money and
- with what he said were drugs.
-
- Mudd went to supposed traffickers' homes "but didn't wear a wire(tap)
- and didn't take any undercover officer with him. He said he was in a rut and
- didn't want a lot of supervision," says prosecutor Tom Hensley. When he came
- back to the office, Mudd would write reports - but the dates and times often
- didn't match what he would say later in depositions.
-
- Mudd himself had gone through drug rehabilitation, and had drug sales and
- possession on his criminal record, says Hensley. Mudd also had a history of
- passing bad checks and was always near broke, working odd jobs.
-
- Nevertheless, Mudd became the linchpin of Operation BAD.
-
- Based on his word, police arrested 35 people in Adair County, including
- Farrell. As Mudd told it, Farrell had sold him marijuana and confided he used
- tractors outfitted with special night lights to harvest fields of dope.
-
- He "whipped up quite the story. He had us out there at night banging
- around, renting big trucks to carry dope. There's no receipts, nothing to show
- that. And wouldn't someone have seen us?" asks Mrs. Farrell. Hensley confirms
- that Farrell has no criminal record, yet on Mudd's allegation, the county
- sheriff first arrested Farrell then ordered his house and farm seized in
- November.
-
- "They came out and searched everything. They took away tea, birdseed, they
- vacuumed our ashtrays in the truck and didn't find anything. Then they told us
- the house was seized and in governmental control. They told us to keep paying
- the taxes, but not to do anything else to the land," says Mrs. Farrell, 36, a
- U.S. Postal Service worker in Kirksville. Her husband, 38, runs a metal
- working shop out of his home.
-
- Of the 35 cases initiated by Mudd, only Farrell's involved seized land.
-
- Adair County kept the criminal cases in local court.
-
- But to make the most of the seizure, the county turned the Farrell
- forfeiture case over to the federal government. Missouri state law directs
- that forfeiture proceeds go to the general fund where they are earmarked for
- public school support. Under federal regulations, though, the local police who
- bring a forfeiture case get back up to 80 percent of any proceeds.
-
- "The federal sharing plan is what affected how the case was brought,
- sure," says Hensley. "Seizures are kind of like bounties anyway, so why
- shouldn't you take it to the feds so it comes back to the local law enforcement
- effort? "
-
- With the forfeiture case firmly lodged in federal court, the county
- criminal cases began to be heard and promptly fell apart.
-
- All 35 cases "went down the tubes," says Hensley. At the first hearing,
- which included Farrell's case, Mudd failed to appear due to strep throat. It
- took him two months to regain his voice, says Hensley, and then he couldn't
- regain his memory.
-
- "The dates he was saying didn't mesh with what he'd put down on reports.
- And I couldn't go out on the street without someone stopping to tell me a Mudd
- bad-cheek story. I decided my only witness was not worth a great deal,
- especially if he was having trouble with his recall."
-
- The case crumbled into powder when the powder turned out to be Tylenol 3.
- Hensley said lab tests showed Mudd had brought back fake drugs as evidence.
-
- Hensley withdrew the criminal charges against Farrell and the others.
-
- Says Hensley of his star witness, "My honest impression is the guy is just
- dumb and watched too much 'Miami Vice. 'You never see Miami Vice' guys write
- anything down, do you?"
-
- The prosecutor doesn't feel Mudd "scammed us that bad. He took us once to
- a patch of dope growing along a country road across the state line in Iowa. It
- was out of the way, so he had to know something. But he couldn't say for sure
- who was growing it."
-
- Although Mudd was less than an ideal informant, local police relied on him
- "because there is marijuana use here and we had to get somebody. We don't get
- big enough cases to get the state police here to do an investigation up right."
-
- Hensley says he "couldn't say how" Mudd might have come up with Farrell's
- name, but Mrs. Farrell has a theory. Several years ago, Mike Farrell, Matthew's
- brother, received probation for a marijuana possession charge - his only
- arrest. Hensley confirms that.
-
- "I think he figured he could say 'Farrell' and it would stick," says Mrs.
- Farrell.
-
- Though the criminal case has faded, the Farrells forfeiture case rolls
- on.
-
- Philosophically, Hensley agrees with the notion "that if you're not
- guilty or charges are dismissed then you ought to be off the hook on the
- forfeiture since no one could prove the case against you. But that isn't the
- way it works with the federal government."
-
- He is not inclined "to call down to St. Louis and tell the U.S. attorney
- to drop it. I've got other things to do with my time. I don't want to sound
- malicious but this will all work out."
-
- So far, it is merely working its way through federal court.
-
- The prosecutor on the Farrell case verifies that the state case was
- adopted by the federal government which means "the facts of their criminal case
- are the same facts that underlie the forfeiture action," says Daniel Meuleman,
- assistant U.S. attorney. "But that doesn't mean we can't go ahead because
- there are different standards of proof involved."
-
- Different is lower. To get a criminal conviction, prosecutors need proof'
- beyond a reasonable doubt. To pursue a federal forfeiture, they need only
- show probable cause.
-
- Meuleman refuses to say whether he will use Mudd as a witness.
-
- Meanwhile, the Farrells wait.
-
- Their attorney's bills already are $5,600 "and that put a crimp in our
- style. We were in shock for a good two months. Every day we thought something
- else might happen and we were scared in our own home.
-
- "That's gotten a little better," says Mrs. Farrell, "but in a town this
- small there's still a lot of talk, you know."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- WITH SKETCHY DATA, GOVERNMENT SEIZES HOUSE FROM MAN'S HEIRS
-
- In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., last summer, forfeiture reached beyond the
- grave, seizing the $250,000 home of a dead man.
-
- A confidential informant told police that n 1988 the owner, George
- Gerhardt, took a $10,000 payment from drug dealers who used a dock at the
- house along a canal to unload cocaine.
-
- The informant can't recall the exact date, the boat's name or the dealers
- names, and the government candidly says in its court brief it "does not possess
- the facts necessary to be any more specific."
-
- But its sketchy information convinced a judge to remove the house from
- heirs, who now must prove the police wrong.
-
- "I was flabbergasted. I didn't think something like this could happen in
- this country," said Gerhardt's cousin, Jeanne Horgan of Hartsdale, N.J.
- She, a friend of Gerhardt's from high school, and a home health aide who cared
- for Gerhardt while he was dying of cancer, are his heirs.
-
- Gerhardt, who died at the age of 49, was an only child who inherited
- "substantial amounts" from his parents and lived in a home that had been in his
- family for 20 years, says Mare H. Gold, attorney for the heirs.
-
- Gerhardt ran a marina until he was 38, then retired and lived off the
- estate left him by his parents.
-
- "I've gone back through his tax returns and every penny is accounted for.
- I can't find an indication he ever was arrested or charged with anything in
- his life," says Gold.
-
- The heirs have filed a motion to have the case dismissed.
-
- While that request is pending, the government is renting the house to
- other tenants for roughly $2,200 a month which the government keeps.
-
- Although the government had its tip six months before Gerhardt's death, it
- didn't file a charge against him. It also didn't seize his house until three
- months after he died.
-
- The notice the government was taking the home came with a sharp rap on the
- door and a piece of paper handed to Brad Marema, the heir who had cared for
- Gerhardt and moved into the house. The notice gave Marema a few days to pack
- up before the government changed the locks.
-
- The point of trying to take the house, "is not so much to punish at this
- stage. The motivation really is to use the proceeds from the sale of the
- property to prevent other drug offenses," says Robyn Herrnann, assistant
- chief of the civil section for the U.S. attorneys office in the Southern
- District of Florida.
-
- The government's case depends on the informant's tip, says Ms. Hermann.
- "Even if I knew more about him (Gerhardt) I wouldn't say, but I don't think
- we do."
-
- The answer to how heirs counter allegations against a dead man "is real
- easy," she says. "Answers are acquired through discovery," a procedure in which
- both sides respond to questions from the other. "We'll take depositions,
- they'll take depositions. That's when they get their answers."
-
- But that isn't how the law is supposed to work counters Gold.
-
- "Who am I suppose to subpoena? Where do I send an investigator? The
- government is supposed to have a case, a reason for kicking someone out of
- their home. It's not supposed to remove them, then build a case."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-