Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jan 2004 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2004 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: David Simpson, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution DEPARTING DA PULLS NO PUNCHES Dekalb's Tom Morgan Set to Exit Saturday As he ends a 21-year career as a prosecutor, DeKalb County District Attorney J. Tom Morgan offers some blunt warnings: . People increasingly don't trust cops, leading to juries that won't convict. . Frustration of victims who don't see offenders held accountable could invite vigilante justice. . Many citizens regard the war on drugs as misguided and hypocritical. "I think our whole war on drugs needs to be looked at," Morgan said as he prepares to leave office Saturday. He said people see crack cocaine users being sent to prison "and on the other hand you've got Rush Limbaugh getting thousands of [prescription pills] and he's making millions of dollars and he's out on the street." The result, he said, is that "juries will no longer hold individuals accountable in drug cases. . . . Juries are telling us that prosecution is not the answer." Morgan has spent most of his adult life putting criminals behind bars. He is nationally recognized as an expert on child abuse. He lost big and then won big in the case against the suspects in the 2000 slaying of DeKalb Sheriff-elect Derwin Brown and became a pain for county Chief Executive Officer Vernon Jones. Morgan has received praise from prosecutors -- who gave him a prestigious award last year -- and defense attorneys. Dwight Thomas, who represented a defendant in a DeKalb death penalty trial last year, calls Morgan "a worthy adversary and professional friend" whose office is regarded by defense lawyers as one of the best in the state. Now Morgan, a Democrat who started in the DeKalb district attorney's office in 1983, is leaving, 11 months before his third term as district attorney was to end. He will work on civil litigation and white-collar crime cases with Balch & Bingham, a Birmingham-based law firm with an office in Buckhead. During a recent interview, Morgan's office already showed the signs of his departure. Walls were stripped bare except for a dozen or so hooks; shelves were half-empty. There was a time, he said, when a police officer's word was like gold to a jury. Today, he said, some jurors seem to distrust all officers -- perhaps because of highly publicized police misconduct, including the conviction of former DeKalb Sheriff Sidney Dorsey for ordering the assassination of Brown, his elected successor. Morgan said the public should understand that "99.9 percent of our police officers are good people." Jurors' distrust of police leads to more acquittals, which Morgan said could one day so much undermine confidence in the criminal justice system that people pursue vigilante justice. "We're a long way from that, but I see victims and victim advocates very frustrated," he said. Few Political Dustups Morgan has largely avoided political conflicts. But as three successive grand juries last year delved into county finances in a noncriminal investigation, CEO Vernon Jones complained that Morgan was conducting a "witch hunt" to tarnish his reputation. In his State of the County address this month, Jones accused Morgan of "convening several grand juries for the sole purpose of public embarrassment" and of making "misguided and uninformed allegations." Morgan insisted citizens on the grand jury drove the investigation, and that two reports that contained criticism of Jones -- including a finding that his security detail was "a very expensive decoration" -- were written by grand jurors, not the district attorney's office. After the State of the County speech, Morgan called Jones "paranoid" and accused him of trying to mislead the public. That spat was far from the most trying moment of Morgan's career. The low point, he said, was in March 2002, when his office failed to win convictions against two defendants in the December 2000 assassination of Brown. Morgan had agreed to give immunity to two admitted conspirators in the murder in exchange for their testimony, but a DeKalb jury did not believe them. So at that point Morgan had zero murder verdicts out of four suspects in a case that drew international attention. "District attorneys from around the country told me this could be a career-ending case," Morgan said at the time. Things had changed by 2003. Morgan won guilty verdicts against Dorsey, who was sentenced to life in prison for murder, racketeering and theft. In recognition of that victory, the International Association of Prosecutors made Morgan the first American district attorney to receive its annual Special Achievement Award. Also last year, Gov. Sonny Perdue appointed Morgan as special prosecutor in the case against Bobby Whitworth, a former parole board member and Corrections commissioner. In December, Morgan won a jury verdict in Fulton County convicting Whitworth on a felony charge of accepting money while a state official in exchange for influencing legislation. One thing Morgan never did as district attorney was have a defendant executed. DeKalb juries have been reluctant to impose the death penalty, and Morgan has founddefendants and victims' families receptive to plea bargains for life without parole. Morgan sought a death sentence last year against cop-killer Bautista Ramirez, but a jury gave Ramirez life with the chance of parole. Tom West, one of Ramirez's lawyers, praised Morgan. His infrequent use of death penalty prosecutions "means a great deal and demonstrates his character as a prosecutor," West said. As he leaves office, Morgan gives a flat answer to the question of whether America needs the death penalty: "No, we do not. We need life without parole and to be able to get that with the use of aggravating circumstances [such as torture] and without the cost of a death penalty case. "It's not the severity of the punishment, but the certainty of the conviction that changes behavior," he said. Morgan's last act as district attorney may be to witness the execution, scheduled for Tuesday night, of Willie James Hall, who was convicted of murdering his estranged wife in DeKalb before Morgan took office. Perdue, a Republican, will appoint a temporary successor to Morgan. Voters in heavily Democratic DeKalb will have their say on a full-time successor in November. Morgan hasn't endorsed anyone, but had some pointed advice about the "very talented pool of lawyers" in his office. "I would hope the people will elect a district attorney who would recognize how talented these people are and would keep them on staff," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake