TX: Dogwood Trails Brazenly Pursues
Pretext Stops
This article from the July
29 Tyler Morning Telegraph describing tactics of the Dogwood Trails
Narcotics Task Force based in Palestine in Northeast Texas:
Between
about 1 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Thursday, authorities from the Dogwood Trails Narcotics Task
Force as well as officials with the sheriff's office, patrolled an area
bordered by Court Drive, Loop 256, Sterne Avenue and Palestine Avenue.
"We
were looking for traffic violations of people coming out of these areas, known for
trafficking narcotics, and once we developed probable cause, then we'd make
traffic stops," Taylor said. "Sometimes it would lead to searches of
vehicles."
Officials
made 20 to 25 stops, in which five people were arrested - four for alleged
drug-related offenses. ...
[T]he
task force and the sheriff's office directed enforcement officer, John Smith, with the
K-9 "Lucky," who participated in the operation.
So,
narcotics enforcement officers essentially pulled drivers over randomly
for
more than eight hours, not to enforce traffic laws but as an excuse to run a drug dog around
the cars. This tactic is designed to net large numbers of people, but
not to target criminal organizations, arrest drug dealers, or to take
anyone off the street except the lowest-level, randomly identified drug users.
Three of the four arrested for drug offenses were found in possession of
less than a gram of controlled substance, while the fourth was busted for
pot.
Those
are classic pretext stops -- the supposed traffic violations were mere pretexts to mask
the task force's real intent to entrap drivers in drug charges. A study authored last year
(pdf, pp 10-11) on behalf of ACLU of Texas by yours truly found that up to
99% of traffic stops by drug task force officers didn't even result in
a ticket. The reason is simple: traffic safety isn't why they're pulling
folks over.
In
case you're a naif who actually thought we still had a Fourth Amendment
in
this country, welcome to your reasonable expectation of privacy
in the 21st century. Combined with the authoritarian logic from Whren, the Caballes case (decided in
January by the US Supreme Court) freed law enforcement to pull over drivers for
minor traffic violations in order to let a drug sniffing dog check the
car. That doesn't constitute a search, Justice Stevens wrote in the
majority opinion. What a crock! But a crock with the force of law. So here
in Palestine we see the fruits of this ill-conceived, activist court
decision: 5 people are arrested, but 20 innocent ones are pulled over for no
good reason -- indeed, more or less admittedly on pure pretext, brazenly
skirting the outer bounds of legality and propriety.
That's
the kind of slimy tactic that caused the Legislature to pass HB 1239 reining in rogue
drug task forces, of which the Dogwood Trails bunch is among the most notorious. See prior Grits coverage
of Dogwood Trails' botched raids, racial profiling and their shooting
of an
unarmed suspect.
This
summer, Texas counties must decide whether to re-apply for money under the new law or to use
the money for other allowable purposes like drug treatment or probation
services. Meanwhile, Texas DPS must decide this summer which areas of
the state it considers priority drug enforcement areas, which will
restrict where drug task forces can be re-authorized (hmmmmm .. do you
think they'll pick rural East Texas where Dogwood Trails operates, or counties
on the border?). Finally, the Governor's office will announce by September
30 which of the 25 remaining Texas drug task forces (down from 46 just
three years ago) will continue to receive funding.
These
types of dragnet tactics fail to target criminal organizations while filing the prisons
with non-violent, low-level offenders. That doesn't solve anybody's
problem. Hopefully local officials, DPS, or the Governor will recognize that
money spent on these liability
magnets
would be better used for treatment and community supervision programs that reduce drug use and crime.
****************
PALESTINE
STOP NETS FOUR
ARRESTS ON DRUG CHARGES
By:
MEGAN MIDDLETON, Staff Writer July
29, 2005
PALESTINE
- Anderson County authorities made several drug-related arrests Thursday night after
targeting an area of Palestine where citizens have often complained about
the drug activity.
Anderson
County Sheriff Greg Taylor said by phone Friday that between about 1 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
Thursday, authorities from the Dogwood Trails Narcotics Task Force
as well as officials with the sheriff's office, patrolled an area
bordered by Court Drive, Loop 256, Sterne Avenue and Palestine Avenue.
"We
were looking for traffic violations of people coming out of these areas, known for
trafficking narcotics, and once we developed probable cause, then we'd make
traffic stops," Taylor said. "Sometimes it would lead to searches of
vehicles."
Officials
made 20 to 25 stops, in which five people were arrested - four for alleged
drug-related offenses.
Undria
White, 24, and Eric Gross, 26, both of Palestine, were charged with possession of more
than four ounces and less than five pounds of marijuana, officials said. They
remained in jail around noon Friday on $7,500 bonds each.
Leslee
Rogers, 18, of Tennessee Colony, was allegedly found to be in possession of what is
believed to be less than a gram of powder cocaine, Taylor said. She is
charged with possession of a controlled substance, penalty group one,
under one gram and remained in jail on $7,500 bond.
Darren
E. Jackson, 34, of Palestine was arrested and charged with possession of a
controlled substance, less than one gram, believed to be crack cocaine, as well
as possession of drug paraphernalia and evading arrest, Taylor said.
He has since bonded out of jail on bonds totaling $15,500.
The
operation came about because of the "numerous, numerous" complaints from the citizens in
that area and intelligence gathered by the drug task force, the sheriff
said.
"I
think this is a step in the right direction to try to quell some of the
drug
use in those neighborhoods, and we plan to continue these type of operations from time
to time," he said. "I feel it was a success."
Taylor
said the task force and the sheriff's office directed enforcement officer, John Smith,
with the K-9 "Lucky," who participated in the operation, are working
hard.
"And
we'll continue to work hard to rid our community of drugs," he said.
Megan
Middleton covers Upshur, Gregg and Anderson counties. She can be reached at
903.596.6287. e-mail: news@tylerpaper.com
Tyler
Morning Telegraph 2005