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  Tulia's Shattered Lives
Posted by CN Staff on August 05, 2002 at 15:48:17 PT
By Bob Herbert 
Source: New York Times  

justice "There," said Mattie White, squinting against the hot sun. "That's where the kingpin lived."

Her voice was thick with disgust and bitter irony as she uttered the word "kingpin." She pointed to the absolute ruin of a house that had belonged to Joe Moore, a pig farmer in his late 50's who was said by law enforcement authorities to be the lead trafficker of the dozens of alleged cocaine dealers rounded up in an infamous series of raids on July 23, 1999.

The house — little more than a shack, really — seemed about to collapse from the weight of its crumbling concrete and rotting wood. Windows were broken, screens were shredded, and the corrugated tin roof was a study in rust and corrosion.

Mr. Moore was no major gangster. But he was swept up in the raids that followed an 18-month "deep undercover" investigation by a narcotics agent named Tom Coleman. There was no evidence that anyone arrested was a substantial dealer of cocaine, as alleged. No drugs, money or weapons were found in the raids. And the evidence against the suspects consisted almost solely of Mr. Coleman's uncorroborated, unsubstantiated word.

But in Tulia, a hot, dusty and racist town on the Texas panhandle, that was enough. Mr. Coleman, who is white, targeted poor black residents and a handful of whites who had relationships with them. Some of the targets had had previous run-ins with the law, and one of those was Joe Moore. Although he insisted he had sold no drugs, he was convicted on the word of Mr. Coleman, and the court was merciless. He was sentenced to 90 years in state prison.

"Joe Moore didn't sell no drugs," said Mrs. White. "All he did was sell his hogs. Me and him was real good friends. He was a nice person, and he would help anyone."

Mr. Coleman's investigative shenanigans (he worked alone, kept no detailed records and fingered obviously innocent people) have devastated the tiny black community here. And they have taken an extreme toll on Mrs. White, a serious, hard-working and very religious black woman of 51. Her 33-year-old daughter Tonya was accused of selling drugs to Mr. Coleman. Not only was Tonya not in Tulia when she was supposed to have been selling the drugs, she didn't even live in Texas.

The charges against Tonya White had to be dropped when lawyers produced bank records that proved she was in Oklahoma City at the time that Mr. Coleman said the drug transaction had occurred.

Mrs. White's son Donald, 32, was not as fortunate. He, too, was accused of selling to Mr. Coleman. And Donald was known to have struggled with a drug habit in the past. He was convicted and sentenced to 14 years in prison. Because of good behavior, and perhaps because there was mitigating evidence offered at trial, Donald was paroled after serving two years.

Mrs. White's daughter Kizzie, 25, was also accused of selling drugs to Tom Coleman. She was convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison.

Mrs. White's son Kareem, 26, was also accused of selling drugs to Tom Coleman. He was convicted and sentenced to 60 years in prison.

This goes on and on. Kizzie White has two children, an 8-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy. The father of the boy is a white man named Cash Love. He, too, was accused of selling drugs to Tom Coleman. Mr. Love was awarded a special measure of Tulia's venom. He was convicted and sentenced to more than 300 years in prison.

It may be that some people sold some small amounts of drugs to Mr. Coleman, a troubled man who has had his own difficulties with the law. But there is no evidence that anyone caught in his net was a major dealer. And there is plenty of evidence that innocent people were snared and sent off to prison.

Mrs. White is now working two jobs as she tries to care for Kizzie's children, maintain her own home and offer hope and support for Kizzie and Kareem, who are in prisons far from Tulia.

"It's very difficult," she said. "These children miss their mama, and I've fallen behind on my mortgage and taxes. It's terrible what that man has done with his lies. He has ruined so many lives. I just pray and ask God to help me, because I know he knows the difference between right and wrong."

Newshawk: Dankhank
Source: New York Times (NY)
Author: Bob Herbert
Published: August 5, 2002
Copyright: 2002 The New York Times Company
Contact: letters@nytimes.com
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/

Related Articles:

Tulia Rally To Mark '99 Drug Sting
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10375.shtml

Panhandle Town's Drug War Reveals Disparity
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread8267.shtml

Justice Department To Probe Tulia Bust
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread7472.shtml


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Comment #5 posted by ekim on August 06, 2002 at 19:39:35 PT
I feel bad that it took me 24hrs to respond
I read this last nite -----all day I felt bad that I did not even take the time to say how sad it made me feel. One can only hope that the [people of NY will wake up and smell texas] three hunderd years its just unbeleivable how such hatred can still exist after all we have gone thru together.

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Comment #4 posted by freedom fighter on August 05, 2002 at 21:04:21 PT
Coleman the KINGPIN!
I really want to know why these men are sitting in prison for 300 years or 90 years!

I as an American do not accept this.

Someone ought to write a book or a movie about this..

ff

[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #3 posted by John Tyler on August 05, 2002 at 18:40:05 PT
Racism etc.
Racism, greed and ignorance come together to form the drug war. The poor and the powerless get the shaft. Maybe this Coleman guy was having a pyschotic episode and meerly imagined these "big deals" and then reported them.

[ Post Comment ]
 
Comment #2 posted by Ethan Russo MD on August 05, 2002 at 17:14:04 PT:

Tulia is a Mark of Shame
Someday, Tulia will be in the history books with the Tuskeegee experiments as a prime example of continued racism in America. It would not surprise me right now if foreign governments were using such evidence to demonstrate us as a nation of the damned. What would our defense be?

[ Post Comment ]
 
Comment #1 posted by p4me on August 05, 2002 at 16:05:11 PT
Something Judge Gray said
Pot-tv with the Kubbys comes out on M, W, and Friday. It is getting harder and harder to get a server since the Donahue Show went up and even worse since the Stossel show went up.

Anyway today they had an interview with Judge Gray who was promoting his new book that is detailed more at his website: http://www.judgejimgray.com/about.html

It is kind of funny with everyone trying to have a fresh idea amongst the choir that articulates in comments to all the news stories, that they have not mentioned this, at least lately and to my knowledge. Anyway, Judge Gray calls the term "controlled substance" an oxymoron because we have no control over these substances. The drug kingpins of the blackmarket control these substances. He says many substances are just to dangerous not to be regulated.

The internet has again brought us another expression to be used in our search for justice, pragmatism, and freedom. It seems like the embarassing performance of journalism by the New York Times in the WOSD is being addressed in articles like this one. Now if the NYT doesn't want to write about the case of the oxymoron, "controlled substance", to what readers they have left it is not because the choir has presented the information and challenge to duty.

1,2

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