There were some who were to deported to Mexico, also, after they got "convicted"...One of the police "informants" involved was pulling in $200,000 for being an informant.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D87RKH9G0.htmlThe four cases involving Hispanic men falsely arrested in 2001 were scheduled for trials in the next several months. Monetary payouts were not disclosed Tuesday.
Wright's four settled cases were brought on behalf of George Sifuentez, Lorenzo Escamilla, Jacinto Jesus Mejia and Israel Pineda. Informants in their arrests had planted bundles of a white powder, sometimes billiard chalk, and then led police to begin false felony prosecutions.
She said some plaintiffs might be due larger payouts than others because they spent longer periods in jail, causing more harm to their lives and careers.
Lawyers hired by the city to investigate the scandal earlier reported that sloppy police work and lax supervision in the department's narcotics division led to the false arrests. Delapaz, Herrera and other former narcotics officers face criminal charges. They are accused of evidence tampering related to reports filed in some of the false arrests.
http://www.cfif.org/htdocs/freedomline/current/in_our_opinion/sordid_trail.htmQuickly forgotten in public tempests of this sort are the stories of the victims, which, in this case,
are those who served time behind bars for crimes they didn’t commit, or, absent the ability to defend themselves, were quickly deported in plea bargain deals. Many of those who weren’t deported hope to resume normal lives in an America they’ve quickly grown to distrust.We know little about the informant. We do know he was paid well for his services.
In exchange for information leading to at least 70 drug busts since 1999, he received roughly $200,000, according to news reports. Yet, according to Chief Bolton, the informant passed a polygraph, indicating he didn’t know the drugs that turned out to be gypsum were phony at the time.
What about the suspended officers? Were they trying to beef up their arrest records? Was race a factor or were the Mexicans they arrested just easy targets? The suspended narcotics officers, Senior Cpl. Mark Delapaz and Officer Eddie Herrera, have more than 10 years on the force and are both highly commended.
As for the police, it may be that the troubling pattern of evidence was lost on officials playing the numbers game -- cops tend to get intoxicated by the big busts. And as for the informant, guilty or not, he’s $200,000 richer.