Click on the clock
to see the
numbers add up
The number of drug arrests,
imprisonments, and costs to
pay for this insane policy
increases every second.
www.drugsense.org
The Drug fLaws.com
 analysis of the drug laws by dennis mcbride
In Parkersburg, West Virginia, 911 dispatcher Jonathan King,
29, was arrested March 18 on charges he passed along
sensitive law enforcement information to a suspected drug
trafficker, TV station WTAP reported. He is charged with
obstructing an officer during the course of a narcotics
investigation. Police would not reveal more about what
information King allegedly forwarded to the drug suspect,
saying it would interfere with an active drug investigation. But
police said King's actions could have placed police in harm's
way. Police said that the subject of the investigation was an old
school friend of King's and that they had no evidence he had
none similar things in the past. He is out of jail on a $2,500
bond pending trial.

In Macon, Missouri, former Macon County District Attorney
David Masters was found murdered last week. Three drug
users with whom he was associating are charged in his death
by cocaine overdose. According to police, the trio, who shared
Masters' home, tied him up and injected him with a lethal dose
of cocaine because he owed rent money and had made a pass
at one of them. According to court documents, when one of the
trio pulled a gun on Masters, he said he would rather die from
a drug overdose. A hard-nosed prosecutor until he lost
re-election in 1998, Masters apparently fell apart after that. His
daughter told the Associated Press Masters had separated
from his wife, abandoned his law clients, and surrounded
himself with drug users, but no one will say out loud that he
had himself was using drugs. Citing no direct source, the AP
said, "Masters fell in with the wrong crowd, by many accounts
sinking into a subculture of drugs and depression."

And in Oakland, California, a pack of predatory Oakland police
who styled themselves the Riders are in the news again. The
group of four cops, Clarence "Chuck" Mabanag, Jude Siapno,
Matthew Hornung, and Frank Vasquez, are on trial on 15
felony counts, from conspiracy to obstruct justice for filing false
reports, to assault, kidnapping, and false imprisonment in a
reign of terror in West Oakland in 2000. According to
prosecution witnesses, the group brutalized suspected drug
offenders, planted drugs, and ran roughshod over the law as
well as area residents. All four were fired by the Oakland Police
Department in 2000 and tried in an eight-month trial in 2003. At
that trial, jurors acquitted them on eight charges and remained
deadlocked on 27 more. The second trial, which has lasted five
months, is now coming to an end. Prosecutors gave their
closing arguments this week. While all four Riders are on trial,
Vasquez is being tried in absentia. He fled in 2000 and is
presumed to be in Mexico.



StoptheDrugWar.org: the Drug Reform Coordination Network,
P.O. Box 18402, Washington, DC 20036, (202) 293-8340
(voice), (202) 293-8344 (fax), e-mail drcnet@drcnet.org. DP -
Flex Your Rights - IAL - Drug War Facts
StoptheDrugWar.org: the Drug Reform Coordination Network
(DRCNet)
1623 Connecticut Ave., NW, 3rd Floor, Washington DC 20009
Phone (202) 293-8340 Fax (202) 293-8344 drcnet@drcnet.org
Newsbrief: This Week's Corrupt Cops Stories
03/25/05
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