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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: Woodall Says His Plea Deal Was Violated
Title:US NC: Woodall Says His Plea Deal Was Violated
Published On:2004-01-07
Source:Dispatch, The (NC)
Fetched On:2008-01-19 01:12:10
WOODALL SAYS HIS PLEA DEAL WAS VIOLATED

GREENSBORO Former Davidson County narcotics officer David Scott Woodall
alleges that federal prosecutors violated an agreement to seek a lighter
prison sentence for him if he provided information about the activities of
other potential defendants, including Sheriff Gerald Hege. Prosecutors,
however, deny making any such agreement with him.

They are opposing a motion by Woodall in U.S. District Court to vacate, set
aside or correct his 27-year sentence in federal prison for conspiring to
distribute illegal drugs, extortion and carrying a firearm during a crime
of violence.

Woodall, 35, was one of five law enforcement officers convicted in 2002 in
connection with a major federal and state investigation of distribution of
cocaine, marijuana, steroids and Ecstasy. The others were fellow county
narcotics officers Doug Westmoreland and Billy Rankin, Thomasville police
Sgt. Rusty McHenry and Archdale police Sgt. Chris Shetley.

All five officers as well as five civilians pleaded guilty to charges in
connection with the probe. Federal authorities portrayed Woodall as the
"ringleader," and he received by far the longest prison sentence.

Woodall, however, states in court papers that he agreed to plead guilty
after prosecutors promised to consider a lighter sentence for him if he
provided information about other possible cases. He contends the promise,
delivered orally through his lawyer but not written into the formal plea
agreement, created an "implied contract" that prosecutors proceeded to
breach. He also accuses prosecutors of using "immunized" information he
provided about drug quantities and gun possession during debriefing
sessions to file additional charges and obtain a longer sentence against him.

"(I)t appears that the government entered into the plea agreement in bad
faith," Woodall alleges.

Because of the agreement, he writes, he met five times for several hours
each with federal and state agents. In those sessions, he said, he provided
information about Jonathan Apt, a Lexington man subsequently sentenced to
prison for conspiring to distribute marijuana and steroids, and Elizabeth
Ann Harward, a Lexington-area woman subsequently sentenced to prison on
steroids-related charges.

He writes that he also provided information about the purchase and use of
steroids by a second Thomasville police officer, who subsequently resigned,
and also met with Georgia detectives to discuss a murder.

Woodall notes also that he admitted planting drugs under the Bristol Street
home of Terrence Barriet, a convicted Lexington cocaine dealer and fellow
inmate in a federal prison in Kentucky. In an effort to keep Barriet behind
bars, federal authorities used Westmoreland as a witness in a hearing last
fall to dispute Woodall's account. Like Woodall, Barriet has filed a
still-pending motion to vacate, set aside or correct his own sentence.

Woodall writes that Lisa Costner of Winston-Salem, his first defense
lawyer, told him prosecutors would also consider, after his sentencing,
filing a motion to reduce his prison term if he "continued to cooperate in
the investigation of Gerald Keith Hege Sr., as it was proposed that if the
government was successful in obtaining an indictment against 'Hege,' that
the petitioner's testimony would be needed in the event that 'Mr. Hege'
exercised his right to trial."

Because of broken promises by the government, Costner and his second
lawyer, Eugene Metcalf of Winston-Salem, should have let him withdraw his
guilty plea and proceed to trial, writes Woodall, who is now serving as his
own attorney.

Federal authorities, in keeping with policy, have never confirmed nor
denied that they were investigating Hege. The sheriff, suspended since last
September, awaits trial in state court on charges of embezzlement,
obtaining property by false pretenses and obstruction of justice as well as
on a petition to remove him from office for corruption.

During the state probe of Hege, agents with the Federal Bureau of
Investigation sat in on some interviews of potential witnesses by the State
Bureau of Investigation.

U.S. Attorney Anna Mills Wagoner, in a written response signed by Assistant
U.S. Attorney Sandra Hairston, who prosecuted Woodall, denies that Woodall
was ever promised he would receive a motion for a lighter sentence for
providing assistance. She also states that investigators had sources of
information other than Woodall for the charges on which he was indicted.
And she argues that Woodall's credibility is tainted by "the false
testimony" he provided in the Barriet case.

"While petitioner did submit to several debriefings with federal agents,
the information he provided did not substantially assist the government in
the investigation and prosecution of other targets prior to the time of his
sentencing," Wagoner states. "The government is not required to file a
substantial assistance motion simply because a defendant thinks he should
get one. Such a notion is completely absurd."

Wagoner's response is accompanied by affidavits from both Costner and Metcalf.

Costner writes that after talking with Hairston she told Woodall "there was
a good possibility that he might not receive a reduction in his sentence."
She said she told him that filing a motion to reduce a sentence for
substantial assistance was "in the sole discretion of the United States
Attorney's office. ... He made his decision to cooperate fully informed of
all of these facts."

Metcalf writes that Woodall, "at great risk and peril to himself and his
family, ... provided significant information to law enforcement about this
matter and other matters under investigation."

He writes that he and Woodall discussed withdrawing Woodall's guilty plea
based on Woodall's belief that the government had agreed to a sentence
reduction for substantial assistance, but after weighing numerous factors
they decided against it.

Woodall's motion to vacate, set aside or correct his sentence is now before
U.S. District Judge William Osteen, who originally sentenced him, for a ruling.
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