Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jul 2005
Source: Gay City News (NY)
Section: Vol 75, Number 28
Copyright: 2005 Gay City News
Contact:  http://www.gaycitynews.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3651
Author: Duncan Osborne
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

METH INFORMANT SPARED LONG TERM

Crime

METH INFORMANT SPARED LONG TERM

Peter K. Harris Sold Crystal, But Credited For 10 Months Served After 
Identifying Other Sellers

A methamphetamine dealer-turned-confidential informant whose work 
with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) netted one 
crystal meth dealer a five-year prison term and a second dealer a 
ten-year sentence, walked out of court a free man on July 11 having 
served just ten months in jail.

"As I explained earlier I will depart downward from the statutory 
guidelines," said Judge Laura Taylor Swain at the sentencing hearing 
for Peter K. Harris. "It is the judgment of this court that your 
sentence will be equal to time served."

Harris, 43, was arrested in February 2003 after he sold meth to a 
civilian confidential informant, identified only as John in court 
records, on three occasions in 2002 and 2003. The transactions were 
recorded using a "kel transmitter"--in common parlance, a wire--that 
John wore, according to court records.

Harris cooperated with the government to reduce his sentence and 
arranged crystal purchases from James Urinyi, 34, and Gary Kiss, 43. 
Those transactions took place in Harris' apartment and were videotaped.

The arrests of Urinyi and Kiss were part of a crackdown that law 
enforcement officials first launched in 2003 aiming to curb the 
distribution of crystal in New York's gay community.

Kiss, who didn't cooperate with the feds, was sentenced to five years 
in federal prison, five years of supervised release when he completes 
his prison sentence and a $70,000 fine on June 2. Kiss' sentence also 
represented a downward departure or reduction from statutory 
guidelines, though considerably less dramatic, based on evidence 
introduced in court about his successful recovery from crystal addiction.

Urinyi, like Harris, had agreed to become a confidential informant, 
but had a history of crystal use and began using meth again after 
becoming an informant, which violated his deal with authorities. 
Defendants who enter into arrangements to cooperate in return for a 
reduced sentence must plead guilty to the most serious charge against 
them. If they violate the deal, they are sentenced under that top 
count. Urinyi was sentenced to 121 months, or just over ten years, in 
November of 2004.

Cooperating is often the only way to avoid the harsh federal 
mandatory minimum sentences, attorneys familiar with such cases say.

"Cooperation is the cornerstone of the federal system," said Isabelle 
A. Kirshner, a criminal defense attorney who has represented gay men 
charged with meth dealing, at a 2004 panel discussion on crystal meth 
and the law. "It's the only way to get around mandatory sentences."

Under his sentence, Harris must forfeit $167,000 he made from selling 
meth plus another $13,000 in cash that was found in a safe in his 
home and inside a bank safety deposit box. He will be on probation 
for four years.

Gay City News could not learn if Harris had helped on other cases, 
but Swain, during the sentencing proceedings, said he had provided 
"substantial assistance in the investigation and prosecution of other 
individuals" and had "worked extensively with law enforcement" on 
cases involving "several individuals."

Matthew Coleman, a DEA special agent who testified at the hearing 
told Swain that Harris' cooperation "was significant and he did put 
himself in harm's way."

Three friends and a family member attended the sentencing and Harris, 
dressed in prison garb despite his attorney's request that he be 
allowed to appear in a suit, spoke briefly at his hearing.

"I'd like to apologize to the court for my actions," he said. "I am a 
better person now for what I have been through."

Reflecting the jeopardy that Harris avoided by his cooperation, two 
of his co-conspirators received harsh sentences.

In February 2004, Ronald "Sammy" Watkins, 36, was sentenced to 87 
months in prison, or just over seven years, and five years probation 
after he sold meth on three occasions in early 2003 to the same law 
enforcement informant Harris sold to.

Watkins' attorney, Nicole Auerbach, had argued that her client should 
receive a reduced sentence because he had been diagnosed with both 
bipolar disorder and AIDS. Watkins was diagnosed with bipolar 
disorder, or manic depression, in 1992 and had received care from 
both a psychiatrist and a therapist, though he often did not take his 
prescribed medications, according to court records. Court records 
also indicated that he used meth, cocaine and Special K, smoked 
crack, and drank alcohol for years, but had tried, with only periodic 
success, to stop his drug use.

Watkins was diagnosed as HIV-positive in 1994 and by the time of his 
sentencing in 2004 he had progressed to an AIDS diagnosis.

Judge Jed S. Rakoff, who presided over Watkins' sentencing, rejected 
Auerbach's argument.

Harris' other co-conspirator, Kurt Douglas Guiterrez, 35, was 
sentenced to 121 months, or just over ten years, and five years of 
supervised release though, as a native of Belize, he will likely be 
deported when his prison time is up. He brokered meth sales, though 
he did not directly handle the drug.

"I was the contact person involved in the sale of methamphetamines 
between the buyer, John, and the seller, Watkins and Harris," he said 
at a June 2003 hearing.

Guiterrez was also a meth user.

"In the mid-1990s, he entered into drug use that ultimately turned 
into drug addiction," Rakoff said of Guiterrez at his September 2003 
sentencing hearing.

Hans Reynoso, 29, was identified as one of Watkins' drug suppliers. 
He was arrested in February of 2003 in possession of 800 Ecstasy 
pills. In March 2004, he was sentenced to time served and three years 
of supervised probation after he entered into a cooperation agreement 
with the government similar to the one Harris has.
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