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News (Media Awareness Project) - US OH: Mansfield Woman Free After Drug Conviction Based on Lies
Title:US OH: Mansfield Woman Free After Drug Conviction Based on Lies
Published On:2008-01-22
Source:Plain Dealer, The (Cleveland, OH)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 02:52:02
MANSFIELD WOMAN FREE AFTER DRUG CONVICTION BASED ON LIES

26 Cases Tied to Informant, DEA Agent Who Manipulated System

Geneva France walked out of federal prison with $68 and a bus ticket
home. That's all the government had to offer a woman who had served
16 months of a decade-long prison sentence for a crime she didn't commit.

The mother of three returned to her family, but her youngest child --
who was 18 months old when France was sent to prison -- didn't recognize her.

And France, 25, had no home to return to.

Her landlord had evicted her from the rental during her
incarceration, and everything she owned had been tossed on the street.

France's case is the nightmare scenario for a system that critics say
sometimes dispenses justice differently for rich and poor.

It shows how easy it is for the government to get convictions in
cases built on shaky investigations.

Defense attorneys say a street-smart but dishonest informant and a
federal agent working without oversight manipulated the system to
convict France and dozens of others.

"They stole the truth," France said. "I don't think I'll ever trust
people again. It's too hard."

"I don't know how a human being with a heart could stand up there and
lie about another person," France said. "They stole part of my life."

She was convicted of being a drug courier -- a conviction that
prosecutors now acknowledge was built on lies. A judge released her
in May. Her case was part of an extensive operation to stem the flow
of drugs in Mansfield.

Today, federal prosecutors will meet with a judge to discuss throwing
out the convictions of 15 men imprisoned in the same tainted
investigation -- including the case against a man serving 30 years in prison.

Federal prosecutors in Cleveland charged France and 25 others from
Mansfield in 2005, based on the work of informant Jerrell Bray and
DEA agent Lee Lucas.

Twenty-one people were convicted.

U.S. Attorney Greg White has admitted that there are major problems
with the case. He declined to elaborate on today's hearing before
U.S. District Judge John Adams.

In recent weeks, a special federal prosecutor and an investigator
have spent hours listening to France, hoping to determine how a
massive drug investigation, spearheaded by the DEA, became a debacle.

In October 2005, France was scraping by in a nursing-home job that
paid little more than the minimum wage. Feeding, changing and
cleaning up after the elderly wasn't her dream job, but it allowed
her to provide for her kids.

France said she believes her trouble began when one of her friends
introduced her to the man the friend dated -- Bray. He scared France
immediately, bragging about how he could stuff her in a trunk, take
her to Cleveland and no one would ever hear from her again.

He also asked France out for a date. She refused.

At 6 a.m. Nov. 10, 2005, federal agents pounded on her door. She
opened it, and authorities burst in, placing her youngest daughter,
Leelasha, on the couch as they searched for drugs. They found nothing.

"I didn't know what to think," France said.

"I was getting my children ready for school when all of a sudden
people start screaming, Where are the drugs?' There were no drugs."

They dragged her to court for her first appearance, and she didn't
recognize many of the people around her, even Ronald Davis -- the
person police said she ran drugs for. It was her first trip to a
courtroom, and she was bewildered.

France had never been in trouble.

In court, she refused a plea agreement of three or four years in
prison and went to trial. If convicted, she could have been sentenced to life.

France said she wasn't worried; she was innocent and had a solid case
to prove it.

She quickly realized she was wrong. Bray, acting as informant for the
DEA, and Lucas said they bought more than 50 grams of crack cocaine
from her about 2 p.m. Oct. 25, 2005, a time when France said she was
braiding a friend's hair.

Lucas and Bray identified her from a photo Mansfield authorities provided.

"As soon as [a sheriff's deputy] showed me the picture, I said,
That's the girl I bought from,' " Lucas testified at France's trial
Feb. 14, 2006.

The picture was France -- her sixth-grade class picture, taken 13
years earlier.

No surveillance photos, which are standard in tracking drug dealers,
were taken in France's case.

It was her word against Lucas'.

"There he was, this big DEA agent who had worked in Bolivia, and
there I was, this woman from Mansfield," France said.

Jurors afterward said they believed Lucas. After all, he was a federal agent.

She was convicted. Her first thought: "I'm never going to see my
children again."

If not for a cousin, her children would have entered the foster-care system.

France split her time between prisons in West Virginia and Kentucky.

Her fellow inmates mocked her, telling her that once federal agents
arrested her, there was no such thing as leaving prison early.

She pored over books she could barely read in law libraries and
thought of her daughters. Her family couldn't afford to visit or call.

France cleaned the prison for 12 cents an hour, allowing her to save
up for a phone card to call home.

For every three hours of work, she earned enough money to pay for one
minute of talking to her daughters on the phone.

"I thought I was going to be in prison for 10 years, and I just gave
up," she said.

Finally, in May, the case unraveled. Bray got in a fight while
selling marijuana on Cleveland's West Side and shot a man. Stewing in
jail, Bray admitted that he lied about France, saying she never sold
any drugs and shouldn't be in prison.

On June 29, federal prosecutors asked a judge to release her immediately.

A prison in Lexington, Ky., gave her a bus ticket and $68 to get home
and sent her back to Ohio. She wanted to see her children, Kyelia, 8;
Kateria, 6; and Leelasha, 3.

It was unsettling. Her older children loved her, but they couldn't
understand why she was gone. Her youngest daughter didn't recognize
her and wouldn't go near her.

The girl is becoming attached to her mother again. But when France
leaves, the first words out of the girl's mouth reflect concern: "Is
Mom coming back? When?"

James Owen, France's attorney, said she missed the most important
time in her children's lives. And nothing can return that, he said.

France and her children live in a rent-subsidized apartment. Life is
not easy. Her bed is a mattress on the floor. She has struggled to
find a job. It doesn't help that her resume includes a 16-month gap
she has trouble explaining.

"Everybody looks at me as if I'm a drug dealer," she said.

Recently, her 3-year-old was nearly dismissed from preschool because
France couldn't afford a $20 certified copy of the girl's birth
certificate. A school official paid for it, and the child is still enrolled.

Lucas, the DEA agent, has declined to speak about the case. Bray has
been sentenced to 15 years in prison for perjury and violating civil
rights related to the Mansfield cases. He is cooperating with the
U.S. Justice Department's internal investigation of the case. His
attorney, John McCaffrey, has urged a detailed look into how the DEA
handled Bray.

In the entire mess, France wants to know the answer to one question:

"Why me?" she said. "Why would anyone be so mad at me? Of all the
women in Mansfield, why me? Because I didn't go out on a date? Why do
that to me over something so dumb?"
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