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News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Texas Pardons 35 In Tulia Drug Busts
Title:US TX: Texas Pardons 35 In Tulia Drug Busts
Published On:2003-08-23
Source:Sacramento Bee (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-19 16:20:04
TEXAS PARDONS 35 IN TULIA DRUG BUSTS

TULIA, Texas (AP) - Gov. Rick Perry on Friday pardoned 35 people who were
arrested in the 1999 Tulia drug busts and convicted based on the testimony
of a lone undercover agent later charged with perjury, in a case that
divided this small town and prompted accusations of racism.

"I believe my decision to grant pardons in these cases is both appropriate
and just," Perry said in a statement.

The governor said he was influenced by questions about the testimony of Tom
Coleman, the only undercover agent involved in the busts. In June, Perry
signed a bill allowing the release of the 12 Tulia defendants who were
still in prison.

"It feels good to finally be completely free," said Freddie Brookins Jr.,
who had been sentenced to 20 years in prison based on Coleman's word. He
was released in June.

His father called Friday's pardons "fantastic."

"We've been waiting for this for four years," Freddie Brookins Sr. said.

An attorney with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which marshaled law firms in
New York and Washington to represent the defendants for free, said Perry
did the right thing.

"This is just really incredible news. This is what we saw the facts
showed," said the lawyer, Vanita Gupta.

Coleman had worked alone and used no audio or video surveillance to
substantiate drug buys he said he made from 46 people from Tulia, a small
town of about 5,100 residents 60 miles north of Lubbock.

Of the 46 people arrested in July 1999, 39 were black, which led civil
rights groups to question if the busts were racially motivated.

A judge this spring ruled that Coleman was "simply not a credible witness"
and recommended the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overturn the
convictions of the 38 people prosecuted and order new trials. Coleman was
indicted for perjury in April and faces a preliminary hearing next month.

The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, asked by Perry to review the cases,
unanimously recommended the pardons last month.

Of those convicted and but not pardoned, one is on deferred probation and
two were not eligible to seek pardons because of convictions on other charges.
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