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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Charges Stun Drug Task Force
Title:US MO: Charges Stun Drug Task Force
Published On:2003-05-15
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO)
Fetched On:2008-01-20 07:21:46
CHARGES STUN DRUG TASK FORCE

Alleged Perjury By Deputy Leads Judge To Toss 3 Cases.

A former Cole County deputy and member of the Mid-Missouri Unified Strike
Team and Narcotics Group, or MUSTANG, is charged with three counts of
perjury after allegedly lying under oath during the jury trials of three men.

In his request for an arrest warrant for former Cole County Sheriff's
Department Deputy Michael Isenberg, Cole County Prosecuting Attorney Bill
Tackett alleges that Isenberg, 28, told juries in three drug cases that he
was present during drug buys when in fact he wasn't present.

The complaint says Isenberg perjured himself on May 7, 2002, Sept. 5, 2002,
and April 8, 2003, while testifying in the trials of Quentin R. Williams,
Randall A. Robinette and Roy G. Chism, respectively.

All three were convicted.

Tackett said yesterday that his office filed a motion to set aside the
convictions, and Williams and Chism were released from prison May 7. He
said Robinette remains in prison on an unrelated conviction.

Isenberg's lawyer, former Cole County assistant prosecuting attorney Rob
Trowbridge, said his client plans to plead not guilty at his earliest
opportunity. The case is still in associate circuit court. A preliminary
hearing is set for June 16.

During an arraignment hearing Monday, Cole County Associate Circuit Judge
Thomas Sodergren denied a Trowbridge motion that sought to stop Cole County
Sheriff John Hemeyer and Tackett from making prejudicial comments about
Isenberg.

Trowbridge said this morning that both Cole County officials have made
comments about Isenberg's character and guilt to reporters.

Hemeyer said Isenberg resigned in writing on Friday after working for the
department for about five years. He said Isenberg started as a jailer and
worked his way up to detective, a post he has held for a little more than a
year.

Though Isenberg worked for the MUSTANG task force, which routinely operates
in Central Missouri, Boone County Prosecuting Attorney Kevin Crane said,
"we haven't ever had" Isenberg "in any cases we have had here in Boone
County to my knowledge."

Tackett said it appears the wrongdoing was isolated to Isenberg. "It was
restricted to one person," he said. "We don't have an epidemic or an agency
that's completely run afoul."

Hemeyer said that he first learned of the possible wrongdoing from
Tackett's office about two weeks ago. He said Tackett noticed a discrepancy
in one particular case in which Isenberg had testified and that subsequent
investigation revealed that Isenberg's "testimony did not bear the light of
day."

Hemeyer said Tackett is now going through other cases in which Isenberg
gave testimony.

As for the cases in question, he said, "In the vast majority of the cases
that I am privy to that are in question, drug sales took place. They just
didn't take place as he described."

Hemeyer, who has been sheriff since 1986, said this has been a huge blow to
his department and has led to changes meant to ensure something like this
doesn't happen again.

He said each officer who responds to a call must now write a report and
sign it, whereas in the past one officer would write a report and describe
the actions of the other officers present.

"What you have to do is eliminate as much possibility as you can of this
happening again," he said. This case "casts a shadow of doubt over the
whole system and what we have been doing."
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