February 9, 2004 - The Associated Press
Perjury Trial Date Set For Tulia Case Drug Agent
TULIA -- Tom Coleman, the former cop discredited in
the fallout from drug arrests he made in Tulia five years, will
go on trial for aggravated perjury May 24 in the same courtroom
where many in the racially charged busts were prosecuted.
Swisher County officials will send out 350 summonses -- twice
the usual number -- to select a jury, said Brenda Hudson, the
county clerk. If convicted, Coleman faces two to 10 years in
prison.
A call to Coleman's attorney, John H. Read II, was not immediately
returned Monday.
At a pretrial hearing in January, Read said Coleman is innocent.
Coleman, 44, was indicted on three counts of aggravated perjury
in April by a Swisher County grand jury. The indictment alleges
he lied under oath during a March evidentiary hearing held to
determine if four black men arrested during Coleman's undercover
drug bust received fair trials. The testimony involved his employment
as a Cochran County sheriff's deputy.
The hearing was halted April 1 when retired state district
Judge Ron Chapman said Coleman was "simply not a credible
witness under oath." Chapman also recommended that the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals grant new trials to everyone convicted
as a result of the busts.
In July 1999, 46 people -- 39 of whom are black -- were arrested
in Tulia where Coleman had worked alone in an 18-month undercover
operation. Authorities found no drugs or money during the arrests
and Coleman had no audio or visual evidence to corroborate the
busts.
The arrests put an international spotlight on the farming
town of about 5,000 and led civil rights groups to claim it was
racially motivated. Coleman is white.
In June, the 13 defendants still imprisoned were released
pending a ruling by the appeals court.
In August, Gov. Rick Perry pardoned 35 of the 38 who were
prosecuted solely on Coleman's word.
Also in August, two woman whose drug charges were dropped
after they proved they were not in Tulia at the time Coleman
claimed he bought drugs from them filed a lawsuit in federal
district court in Amarillo. In the ongoing lawsuit, Zuri Bossett
and Tonya White accuse area law enforcement officials of violating
their constitutional rights.
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