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By BOB HERBERT
Tulia is a hot, dusty town of 5,000 on the Texas Panhandle, about 50
miles south of Amarillo.
For some, it's a frightening place, slow and bigoted and bizarre. Kafka
could have had a field day with Tulia.
On the morning of July 23, 1999, law enforcement officers fanned out
and arrested more than 10 percent of Tulia's tiny African-American population.
Also arrested were a handful of whites who had relationships with blacks.
The humiliating roundup was intensely covered by the local media, which
had been tipped off in advance. Men and women, bewildered and unkempt,
were paraded before TV cameras and featured prominently on the evening
news.
They were drug traffickers, one and all, said the sheriff, a not particularly
bright Tulia bulb named Larry Stewart.
Among the 46 so-called traffickers were a pig farmer, a forklift operator
and a number of ordinary young women with children.
If these were major cocaine dealers, as alleged, they were among the
oddest in the U.S. None of them had any money to speak of. And when
they were arrested, they didn't have any cocaine. No drugs, money or
weapons were recovered during the surprise roundup.
Most of Tulia's white residents applauded the arrests, and the local
newspapers were all but giddy with their editorial approval. The first
convictions came quickly, and the sentences left the town's black residents
aghast. One of the few white defendants, a man who happened to have
a mixed-race child, was sentenced to more than 300 years in prison.
The hog farmer, a black man in his late 50's named Joe Moore, was sentenced
to 90 years. Kareem White, a 24-year-old black man, was sentenced to
60 years. And so on.
When the defendants awaiting trial saw this extreme sentencing trend,
they began scrambling to plead guilty in exchange for lighter sentences.
These ranged from 18 years in prison to, in some case, just probation.
It is not an overstatement to describe the arrests in Tulia as an atrocity.
The entire operation was the work of a single police officer who claimed
to have conducted an 18-month undercover operation. The arrests were
made solely on the word of this officer, Tom Coleman, a white man with
a wretched work history, who routinely referred to black people as "niggers"
and who frequently found himself in trouble with the law.
Mr. Coleman's alleged undercover operation was ridiculous. There were
no other police officers to corroborate his activities. He did not wear
a wire or conduct any video surveillance. And he did not keep detailed
records of his alleged drug buys. He said he sometimes wrote such important
information as the names of suspects and the dates of transactions on
his leg.
In trial after trial, prosecutors put Mr. Coleman on the witness stand
and his uncorroborated, unsubstantiated testimony was enough to send
people to prison for decades.
In some instances, lawyers have been able to show that there was no
basis in fact none at all for Mr. Coleman's allegations,
that they came from some realm other than reality.
He said, for example, that he had purchased drugs from a woman named
Tonya White, and she was duly charged. But last April the charges had
to be dropped when Ms. White's lawyers proved that she had cashed a
check in Oklahoma City at the time that she was supposed to have been
selling drugs to Mr. Coleman in Tulia.
Another defendant, Billy Don Wafer, was able to prove through
employee time sheets and his boss's testimony that he was working
at the time he was alleged by Mr. Coleman to have been selling cocaine.
And the local district attorney, Terry McEachern, had to dismiss the
case against a man named Yul Bryant after it was learned that Mr. Coleman
had described him as a tall black man with bushy hair. Mr. Bryant was
5-foot-6 and bald.
In a just world, this case would be no more than a spoof on "Saturday
Night Live." Instead it's a tragedy with no remedy in sight.
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the William Moses Kunstler
Fund for Racial Justice, the Tulia Legal Defense Project and a number
of private law firms are trying to mount an effort to free the men and
women imprisoned in this fiasco.
The idea that people could be rounded up and sent away for what are
effectively lifetime terms solely on the word of a police officer like
Tom Coleman is insane.
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