Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jun 2003
Source: Austin Chronicle (TX)
Section: Naked City
Copyright: 2003 Austin Chronicle Corp.
Contact:  http://www.auschron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/33
Author: Jordan Smith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas)

SONGS OF FREEDOM IN TULIA

Last week was filled with more news spawned by the infamous 1999 Tulia drug
busts. On June 16, 12 of the remaining Tulia defendants were finally
released from jail on bond, the result of a bill authored by Sen. John
Whitmire, D-Houston, sponsored by Rep. Terry Keel, R-Austin, and signed into
law by Gov. Rick Perry. The law allows 13 of the 46 original Tulia
defendants to be freed pending a decision by the Court of Criminal Appeals
on whether the cases, built solely on the testimony of rogue undercover cop
Tom Coleman, should be vacated and dismissed -- as a Swisher Co. judge and a
special prosecutor recommended after a March hearing. (The 13th defendant,
who would've been eligible for release under Whitmire's bill, remained in
jail Monday on a warrant from Potter Co. One other defendant also remains in
jail pending the outcome of his direct appeal; the rest have already been
paroled or released on probation.)

On June 7 the State Bar of Texas named Amarillo defense attorney Jeff
Blackburn criminal defense attorney of the year for his work defending a
majority of the Tulia 46. Blackburn (along with Plainview attorney Paul
Holloway, who was appointed to defend nine of the defendants) was
instrumental in discrediting Coleman's testimony. Coleman is currently
facing three charges of aggravated perjury for lying on the stand during the
March evidentiary hearing.

Meanwhile, it appears the Tulia debacle has spurred its own little cottage
industry. On Thursday, June 19, at 5pm, Waterloo Records will host a
CD-release party for the 11-song Tulia Texas Review, reportedly designed to
celebrate the 12 defendants' newfound freedom. Attorney Jeff Frazier, who
volunteered to help Texas ACLU Director Will Harrell organize and file
various federal lawsuits and complaints stemming from the Tulia debacle,
wrote the songs on the album, on which Frazier also sings along with Austin
staples Malford Milligan and Ruben Ramos. While at least one song, titled
"Tulia, Texas," clearly refers to the infamous drug sting, others -- such as
"Thermobaric Bunker Buster Bomb" -- don't seem much related to the Panhandle
busts at all. Still, according to a press release, a portion of the proceeds
from the CD will be used to establish a Task Force Blues Legal Defense Fund.
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