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Recent Mexican laws Contrast with Oklahoma on Drug Possession

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Police Charged with Selling Heroin

Posted by Edmond Geary | Posted in Drug Conspiracy, Drug charges, Drug distribution, Police corruption | Posted on 28-07-2010

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Angel “Fat Boy” Ortiz had a meeting near the North Philadelphia Amtrak station.  He met with James Venziale to discuss some business. The idea was to steal some heroin from Miguel Santiago with the help of Philadelphia police officers and then sell the heroin to drug dealer.  The problem was that the intended purchaser, the drug dealer, was an undercover DEA special agent.

Now three Philadelphia police officers are facing federal charges of planning the theft of 300 grams of heroin and selling it to a drug dealer.   Robert Snyder, Mark Williams, and James Venziale are Philadelphia police officers. ‘They are charged with four other people, including three reputed drug dealers and Snyder’s wife, Christal.

The Police Commissioner was aghast. He was planning to terminate the three police officers.

The police officers met with “Fat Boy” over several weeks and another apparent drug dealer, Zachary Young.  Their plan was for the police officers to stop a vehicle to make it appear to Santiago that the drugs were being lawfully seized by law enforcement.

Officers Venziale and Williams, on duty and in uniform, stopped a car occupied by Ortiz and the undercover agent.  Ortiz had just received the heroin from a courier.  Venziale and Williams handcuffed Ortiz and permitted the undercover agent to drive with the 300 grams of heroin.  Venziale and Willams then drove Ortiz away and later released him. Venziale and Williams later met with Ortiz, who paid the two officers $6,000.  Ortiz also met with Christal Snyder and paid her an unknown amount of cash.

The reaction to the indictment from many sectors of the community was disappointment.  Majeedah Rashid, director of the Nicetown Community Development Corporation, said the indictment diminished the community’s trust in the police.  “We work very closely with the community relations people there. It’s a long running relationship.  It’s unfortunate that this happens because you’re going to end up losing the trust of the community and we worked so hard to established.,” he said.

Ralph Wynder, an activist in the Allegheny West section and chairman of the Residents Coalition, a coalition of community groups in the Allegheny West and East Falls, said the indictment was troubling.  Wynder stated, “If the charges prove to be true, this will become a very disturbing series of events.”  He said his community has worked closely with the 39th District, the Police District to which the indictees belong, over the past 10 years.

Venziale, Williams, Robert and Christal Snyder, Ortiz, Young, and Santiago are all charged with conspiracy to distribute 100 grams of more of heroin and related counts, which include the charge against Christal Snyder of passing information between Ortiz and the three officers.  Santiago is in parts unknown.  The F.B.I. and the D.E.A. are looking for him.

DEA Agent & Drug Conspiracy Part 2

Posted by Edmond Geary | Posted in Drug Conspiracy, Drug charges, Law enforcement, Oklahoma drug enforcement, Wrongful Convictions | Posted on 02-06-2010

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Former federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives agent Brandon McFadden is in jail, having pled guilty to conspiracy to a drug conspiracy and reportedly telling a federal grand jury how he and Tulsa Police Officers broke the law with him.  Ryan Logsdon, the informant McFadden and Police Officer Jeff Henderson used to convict father and daughter Larry Wayne Barnes and Larita Barnes, recanted his testimony, resulting in the Barnese’s release from prison.  Henderson in on paid leave, waiting to be indicted.

Now more names are coming out, people who have been released from wrongful convictions and Tulsa police officers.  Bobby Wayne Hadley, serving a 20-year sentence for a drug conviction is expected to be released from federal prison.  The reason is stated in a petition filed in U.S. District Court in  Tulsa.  The petition states that an informant, said she lied about a fabricated drug buy and that was coached by two Tulsa police officers.

Rochelle Martin swore in an affidavit that Tulsa police officers Jeff Henderson and Bill Yelton told her to testify falsely that drugs were being sold at Bobby Wayne Hadley’s house. “My false testimony was solicited by Jeff Henderson, who was at the time a Tulsa police officer,” she stated in an affidavit.  “Jeff Henderson and Bill Yelton [another police officer] coached me on what they wanted me to say to the judge.  They drove me to the hearing together and told me to testify that I had been to Bobby Haley’s home and his salvage yard and that I had been present during drug transactions at those places.”

Haley would be the fourth inmate released from the revelations of this grand jury.  Besides the two Barneses, Demarco Deon Williams has been released from federal prison.  Fred Allen Shields had his federal conviction vacated.  The petition with Rochelle Martin’s affidavit is being considered by U.S. District Judge Terence Kern.  Neither Henderson, Yelton or John K. Gray, another Tulsa police officer implicated, has been charged with anything.  But that is not unusual because the federal process is slow and goes as wide as it can, rolling up everyone it can.  McFadden has reportedly implicated at least Henderson, while Henderson has been taking lie detector tests and holding press conferences to tell about it. His legal bills are being paid by the Fraternal Order of Police.

DEA Agent in Jail for Drug Conspiracy

Posted by Edmond Geary | Posted in Constitutional rights, Criminal defense, Drug Conspiracy, Drug charges, Justice Abuse, Legal rights, Wrongful Convictions | Posted on 11-05-2010

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A former A.T.F. agent is in jail, awaiting prosecution for a fabricated drug buy.  Brandon McFadden was an agent for the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for seven years before resigning last year.  He was arrested by the F.B.I. and is now in the Tulsa County Jail awaiting prosecution in U.S. District Court there.  McFadden pled guilty soon after he was arrested to participating in a drug conspiracy.

McFadden is alleged to have coached a drug informant and fabricated a drug buy on May 8, 2007.   Not charged but implicated along with McFadden in the crime is Jeff Henderson, a Tulsa Police Officer.  Upon pleading guilty, McFadden named Henderson as a co-conspirator in the drug conspiracy, saying he and Henderson stole drugs and money and set up drug dealers to sell drugs on their behalf.

The drug buy with the coached informant led to the conviction of Larita Annette Barnes and Larry Wayne Barnes of federal drug charges.  They were both released from federal prison last July because the informant, Ryan Logsdon, said he lied about the drug buy.   Larry Barnes had served about a year on a 5 ½ year sentence.  Larita Barnes had served about a year on two concurrent 10-year sentences.

Jeff Henderson was put on paid leave from the Tulsa Police Department in April after the local newspaper published the report about the Barnes’s being released from prison.  He should be getting ready for prison because McFadden will do whatever he can to help the U.S. Attorney to convict him.

Tulsa County District Attorney Tim Harris has ordered a review of the cases in which Henderson had been involved, which could number more than 100.   Harris announced in court that he could not release any information because there is an ongoing grand jury investigating matters, but Harris’s office acknowledged that it was contacted by Jane W. Duke, special prosecutor assigned to investigate corruption in law enforcement in Tulsa.  She is U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas.

This sort of thing does not come as a surprise to criminal defense lawyers.  Some people, however, believe uncritically in “law enforcement,” they will alibi without reason for these false-swearers.   Some people will continue to believe such “law reenforcement” types are the good guys, in spite of clear evidence they are the bad guys, law-breakers, perjurors, those who bear false witness and wrongfully put people in prison.  There are those who believe that just because someone wears a uniform, that someone can do no wrong.  That is a dangerous attitude, that someone can commit no wrong.  It is not the principle that drives our American system of justice, and that is why McFadden is being prosecuted.