Pubdate: Fri, 02 Aug 2002
Source: Rutland Herald (VT)
Copyright: 2002 Rutland Herald
Contact:  http://rutlandherald.nybor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/892
Author: Bob Herbert
Note: Bob Herbert is a New York Times columnist.

LAW CLOWN

The state agency that monitors standards for law enforcement officers in 
Texas had already been warned about Tom Coleman when he was hired to 
conduct a bizarre one-man undercover drug operation that targeted the black 
population in Tulia, a small town on the Texas panhandle.

Dozens of black people, and a handful of whites who had relationships with 
blacks, were arrested on July 23, 1999, after an 18-month "investigation" 
by Coleman that at times was as farcical as a Jim Carrey movie.

Coleman, who is white, was a clownish and inept officer who threw away 
important evidence, made terrible mistakes when identifying suspects, 
routinely used racist language and on at least one occasion discharged his 
weapon accidentally.

And yet, on his uncorroborated, unsubstantiated testimony, defendant after 
defendant was convicted of selling drugs, and some were sentenced to prison 
terms of 20 years, 60 years, 90 years and more.

For his exploits in Tulia, Coleman was given a state "Lawman of the Year" 
award.

But even before the curtain rose on the Tulia farce, the sheriff in another 
jurisdiction, Cochran County, had complained to the Texas Commission on Law 
Enforcement about Coleman's conduct.

In a letter to the commission dated June 14, 1996, the sheriff, Ken Burke, 
said, "It is my opinion that an officer should uphold the law. Coleman 
should not be in law enforcement if he is going to do people the way he did 
in this town."

Officials in Tulia said they didn't know about that complaint when they 
hired Coleman. But in the middle of his Tulia operation, Coleman was hit 
with misdemeanor charges of theft and abuse of his official position in 
Cochran County, where he had run up thousands of dollars in debts before 
abruptly leaving.

Coleman's boss in Tulia, Swisher County Sheriff Larry Stewart, conveniently 
allowed his undercover cop to put his investigation on hold, giving him 
time to borrow money and resolve the Cochran County charges.

Coleman's investigation in Tulia was incredibly shabby, but it led to the 
arrest of more than 10 percent of the town's black population.

Erick Willard, a lawyer who defended two women accused by Coleman, said he 
had been stymied in his efforts to get Coleman's original, handwritten 
accounts of individual arrests. In some cases, said Willard, "The way he 
would record it was he'd lift up his pants leg and he'd write it on his leg."

Notes committed to paper were just as difficult to come by. Willard said 
that during the discovery process he learned that secretaries had 
supposedly typed some of Coleman's reports from notes that were then 
"thrown away in a trash Dumpster."

He said he was never able to find out who the secretaries were.

Coleman liked to brag that he was "deep undercover," and that no one knew 
where he was or what he was doing, "not even the police."

Willard's clients insisted they were innocent. Both took polygraph tests 
and, in Willard's words, "passed with flying colors." But lie detector 
tests are not admissible in court and the district attorney's office would 
not dismiss the charges.

Both women pleaded no contest. They were sentenced to time already served, 
fined and released.

Top officials in Tulia acknowledged that drugs were also sold and consumed 
by white and Hispanic residents, but Coleman focused almost exclusively on 
blacks. In a videotaped interview, parts of which were aired on a local 
television station, Coleman said he used the term "nigger" both on the job 
and in casual conversations with friends and family. He said he believed 
the word was no longer "as profane" as it once was.

Coleman eventually packed up and left Tulia, but he soon found himself in 
trouble again - this time in Ellis County. Joe Grubbs, the district 
attorney of Ellis County, whose office had hired Coleman, told me that, 
among other things, Coleman had engaged in contact with a woman that was 
"inappropriate." He would not give details.

He said Coleman had also accidentally discharged his weapon during a drug 
raid, but no one had been injured.

There were other problems, a "multiplicity" of problems. Said Grubbs: "He, 
in effect, put me in a position where I had to discharge him, and I did."
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