11 12 07 WFP Informant
11 12 07 WFP Informant
11 12 07 WFP Informant
Corrupt religious and community leaders learned that a young man was
traveling around the countryside inciting people with harsh criticism of their
leadership. People listened to this man. They began to question these
leaders. Feeling threatened by the new order this young man advocated, the
leaders decided he must die – but he had to be killed legally within the
framework of the criminal justice system.
But the young man was so popular that large crowds followed him,
protecting him from enemies. The leaders realized that a public arrest would
precipitate a riot, so they conspired to get him away from his followers so he
could be arrested. They laid traps for him but he always managed to elude
them as though the hand of God was guiding him.
The leaders were near the end of their wits when one of the young man’s
closest confidants offered to help. Some say he was motivated by 30 pieces
of silver; others say it was anger at the young man’s message of hope and
forgiveness. Whatever the motive, the cooperating confidant led the young
man into a trap where he was taken into custody by the soldiers. The young
man was tortured, tried, convicted, and executed.
The confidant’s betrayal has never been forgotten, or forgiven. The traitor’s
name, always the subject of infamy, was Judas Iscariot – one of Jesus
Christ’s twelve disciples.
As a member of society enjoying all the benefits of law and order, a citizen
has a moral obligation to support and assist in the maintenance of social
order. A citizen is not only expected but has a fundamental duty to report to
law enforcement authorities emergencies, crises, accidents, crimes, or
anything that threatens social order.
But there is a significant difference between this social duty and the betrayal
of Judas. Iscariot was a police informant. His actions were not motivated by
duty to preserve the social good. He was motivated by personal interest. He
coveted and betrayed the trust of another. He sold his services to law
enforcement – he gave up someone in exchange for a benefit. He was a
police informant.
Most people do not like informants, or “snitches” as they are known in the
common vernacular. Most police who work with them do not like them, but
these same police say informants are essential to effective law enforcement.
They point to the “war on drugs” as an example, saying that informants live
and survive in the drug subculture in a way that “undercover’ cops cannot.
And police quickly utilize informants when one of their own is killed
because they need “information” fast, not only to solve the crime but to fuel
their outrage against the “cop killer.”
Take for example the murder of New Orleans police officer Gregory
Neupert near the Fisher Housing Project in 1980. The New Orleans police
department launched a swift, and brutal, search for the “cop killer” in the
area. The quickly developed information from “reliable informants” that
Reginald Miles and James Billy, Jr. killed the officer. The police raided
Billy’s apartment, killing him in an alleged shootout. They next raided an
apartment occupied by Miles and his girlfriend, Sherry Lynn Singleton, and
killed them both in another alleged shootout.
There was intense outrage against the police killings by the African-
Americans community. This outrage triggered a number of governmental
and activists investigations, prompting the resignation of Police
Superintendent James Parsons. The two alleged police informants, Johnnie
Brownlee and Robert Davis, came forward telling the local news media that
they had been beaten by the police to provide information against Miles and
Billy.
“They kept on showing me Billy’s picture and making it clear that they
wanted me to identify Billy as a man who was standing on Nunez Street
[scene of the Neupert killing],” Brownlee said. “My mouth was bleeding,
my face was bleeding where they hit me with a pistol and where I now have
a scar, and they said they would kill me if I did not identify someone and
then let me know by showing me Billy’s picture over and over again that
they wanted me to say it was him.”
It was during this era when police misconduct with informants was
becoming increasingly more prevalent in the nation’s declared “war on
crime” that the United States Justice Department announced “new
guidelines” which allowed FBI informants to commit serious crimes in
certain “paramount” investigations. While the guidelines prohibited
informants from participating in any crime “without authorization or
approval of an appropriate government official,” the guidelines granted
authority to FBI supervisors to determine whether “the conduct is necessary
to obtain information or evidence for paramount prosecution purposes.”
Nearly three decades later informants have become pervasive throughout the
American culture. They are utilized in law enforcement, business, schools
(from pre-grade to college), professional sports, entertainment industry, IRS,
crime-stoppers, America’s Most Wanted, prisons, and even churches. In a
highly political, competitive, and fearful society, information is a prized
commodity that translates into the accumulation of individual benefits and a
general opportunity to influence the shape of events. For the criminal
informant, it means providing the direction and even the outcome of a
criminal investigation and subsequent prosecution by the government.
The agents drove Terrebone to a nearby telephone booth where he called his
supplier. The agents and Terrebone returned to his residence. After a brief
wait, the supplier drove up to Terrebone’s residence. The agents gave
Terrebone $175 for the drug purchase. Terrebone walked to the supplier’s
car, gave him the money, and returned to the house with 22 packets of
heroin. The agents gave Terrebone three packets and left with 19.
The informant was Lionel Parks. Earlier that night he had been at
Terrebone’s house talking about “scoring” some heroin. Parks told
Terrebone he would pay for the score and get him high as well. Terrebone
was a married father of one child. He worked as a carpenter. He was not a
criminal. He was an addict. He fed his habit by working as a middle man,
scoring bundles from his supplier and taking 2 or three packets off the top
for his own use. Parks knew this.
Parks was on parole. He was doing drugs, stealing, and anything else it took
to survive. Several weeks before the Terrebeone deal Parks stabbed an
undercover agent while high on heroin. He made a “deal” with the police to
bust others if they would not violate his parole or charge him with stabbing
the agent.
The Boston GLOBE in 2003 reported about the findings of a two-year study
by the House Committee on Governmental Reform into the 40-year history
of the FBI’s use of organized crime figures as informants in the New
England area, particularly the infamous South Boston underworld boss
James Whitey Bulger. The report found that, according to the GLOBE, “FBI
agents became corrupt, encouraged perjury in death penalty cases, let
innocent men languish and die in prison, and allowed people to be murdered,
all in the name of protecting informants.”
Still the committee found that the use of informants by law enforcement is
essential during an era “when the United States is faced by threats from
international terrorism, and a number of law enforcement tools are being
justifiably strengthened.” But the committee’s report said that the “results of
the committee's investigation make clear that the FBI must improve
management of its informant programs to ensure that agents are not
corrupted … The Committee will examine the current FBI's management,
security and discipline to prevent similar events in the future."
The title of the congressional report itself was disturbing: “Everything Secret
Degenerates: The FBI’s Use of Murderers as Informants.” More disturbing
was the fact that the U.S. Justice Department did not cooperate with the
congressional investigation and actually tried to obstruct it.
"Throughout the Committee's investigation, it encountered an institutional
reluctance to accept oversight," the report states. "The Committee has
concluded that the Justice Department failed to take responsibilities to assist
Congress as seriously as it should have."
The highly critical congressional report was one of many revelations at the
time about the FBI’s use of organized crime figures as informants. One such
informant was the violent and murderous underworld hitman, Joseph “The
Animal” Barboza. The report cited a recorded conversation between
Barboza and New England crime boss Raymond L.S. Patriarca during which
“The Animal” said he planned to murder a rival by burning down his
apartment even though the target’s mother might be inside. The FBI had
already used this thug to frame four men for the 1965 murder of a petty thief
named Edward “Teddy” Deegan. Two of the men died in prison and the
other two were released after serving more than 30 years in prison before a
federal court investigation resulted in their release.
FBI Director Robert Mueller embraced the report’s call for reforms.
"When Director Mueller was brought on board, his intent was to change the
direction of the FBI and move it into the 21st century," spokesman Edwin
Cogswell said. "While the FBI recognizes that there have been instances of
misconduct by a few FBI employees, it also recognizes the importance of
human-source information in terrorism, criminal, and counterintelligence
investigations."
"No one disputes the proposition that destroying organized crime in the
United States was an important law enforcement objective," the report
stated, referring to the use of Bulger and other Irish gangsters to inform on
their rivals in the Italian Mafia. "However, the steps that were taken may
have been more injurious than the results obtained."
The decision by the U.S. Justice Department in the early 1980s to officially
allow informants to participate in serious crimes (while altogether not a new
practice) produced a bitter, murderous harvest as evidenced by the Whitey
Bugler and the Barboza episodes.
DUTY TO REPRESENT
If attorneys are allowed the professional luxury to say they will not represent
a cooperating witness, what about terrorists? Who will represent them? It
certainly cannot be reasoned by any rational standard of human intelligence
that a cooperating witness is more morally reprehensible than a terrorist who
blows up innocent people, including helpless children, in support of some
warped religious or political ideology.
The question is this: who are you going to invite to dinner, the snitch or the
person who would kill the snitch. No one likes a “tattle-tale” or a “suck-up”
(Johnny bringing the apple to the teacher) but what is there to like about
Pablo Escobar or the tattooed, foul-mouthed con who knifes the tattle-tale on
the prison yard. Pick your garbage.
The fact of the matter is that an attorney really does not have a choice. The
United States Supreme Court imposed upon attorneys a fundamental duty to
effectively represent their clients throughout the criminal proceedings,
including sentencing. See: Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687
(1984). See also: Maganana v. Hofbauer, 263 F.3d 542, 561 (2001)
[counsel’s failure to correctly advise defendant about sentencing exposure
was prejudicial because had defendant known his exposure, he would have
agreed to spend ten years in prison rather than risk the 20-year ultimately
imposed by jury].
CONCLUSION
An attorney who takes cooperation with law enforcement off the defense
table under threat of withdrawal from the case violates a criminal
defendant’s Sixth Amendment guarantee to effective assistance of counsel.
Worst yet, the attorney is guilty of legal malpractice because a client’s
interests always comes before the attorney’s personal values system. An
attorney’s personal disdain for “snitches,” just like a personal dislike for
child molesters, does not factor into the duty to provide effective
representation.
SOURCES: The Boston Glode (Nov. 2003) and THE ANGOLITE (Nov.-
Dec. 1980), the official publication of the Louisiana State Penitentiary.