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Bad Times In Tulia, TX
Former Tulia Defendants Celebrate Pardons;
Civil Rights Lawsuit Filed Against Drug Sting Officials
(August 22, 2003) Thirty-five former defendants in the infamous drug sting in Tulia,
Texas celebrated the announcement today that Texas Governor Rick Perry
had granted full pardons for their convictions on alleged drug crimes
in 1998-1999.
These pardons finally
vindicate the men and women of Tulia who were wrongfully charged and
convicted on the word of one dishonest, racist officer with a checkered
past. It also ensures that these Tulia residents will not be forced to
return to prison to complete harsh sentences ranging up to 341 years.
The pardons follow findings
by a trial judge that the rogue officer and the rest of the prosecution
team engaged in significant misconduct, including perjury and
withholding exculpatory evidence, in order to unlawfully secure the
convictions. The pardons also called into substantial question the
methods of the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Task Force, which was
responsible for hiring, training, and supervising the officer, and the
District Attorney's Office, which prosecuted and convicted
approximately ten percent of Tulia's black population.
"This is a huge victory in
these cases, and we commend the Governor for doing the right thing,"
said Vanita Gupta, LDF staff attorney. "We are simply overwhelmed with
joy and excitement. This marks the end of the first stage in a
four-year struggle to expose what really happened in Tulia, Texas. Now
we enter the second stage - filing civil lawsuits to fully expose the
wrongs in Tulia."
The attorneys for former
Tulia defendants Tonya White and Zuri Bossett filed a civil rights
lawsuit in federal court in Amarillo, Texas today against Swisher
County and its officials, including former undercover narcotics agent
Tom Coleman, Sheriff Larry Stewart, District Attorney Terry McEachern,
as well as the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Trafficking Task Force, its
constituent members, its Board of Governors, and its Amarillo Police
Department employees who were responsible for hiring, training, and
supervising Tom Coleman.
Tonya White
and Zuri Bossett are two African-American women who were charged with
selling cocaine to Coleman during the notorious 1999 Tulia undercover
operation. Ms. White was able to establish her innocence by providing a
time-stamped check showing that she was actually more than 300 miles
away at a bank in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. As a result, on April 11,
2002, two days before Ms. White's scheduled trial, District Attorney
McEachern dismissed the indictment against her. Likewise, Ms. Bossett
was not living in Tulia at the time of her alleged drug sale, and the
State was never able to produce any credible and corroborating evidence
that Coleman allegedly used to implicate Ms. Bossett in the Tulia
sting. District Attorney McEachern dismissed the indictment against Ms.
Bossett on July 23, 2002.
In their civil complaint,
Ms. White and Ms. Bossett allege, among other things, that officials
violated their civil rights by falsely arresting them, falsely filing a
police report against them, falsely testifying against them in the
grand jury without probable cause, and falsely swearing out an
inaccurate arrest warrant to effectuate their arrests. The plaintiffs
also allege that officials violated their civil rights by failing to
adequately screen Coleman during the hiring process, failing to
adequately train Coleman, and failing to adequately supervise Coleman'
s activities.
Furthermore, Ms. White and
Ms. Bossett allege that officials engaged in a conspiracy to violate
their civil rights, motivated by racial animus directed at African
Americans in Tulia. Other claims include intentional infliction of
emotional distress and malicious prosecution.
The filing of today's suit
is one more step in our quest to right the horrific wrongs that have
been inflicted on our clients and the entire Tulia community. Ms. White
and Ms. Bossett bring this lawsuit to hold the officials responsible
for the sting operation accountable for their patently illegal behavior
and to further expose the conduct that gave rise to the sting.
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