The Battalion Monday, Nov. 28, 1988 Page 3 am, The ve the “death into their is a low-down g worse than a penalties” proclaiming tohl lestroying the pted to take a own opinion,bin l solely on jf someone with rrived here, you ply winning a >ing to the hese are wo-year nd 2.) probabh te University)in but instead you s. You broke i and yourself, •ryone knows he four years >f being known hips and the State/Local ewspaper: DEA staged seizures for press HOUSTON (AP) — The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration [lirected local law enforcement agen cies throughout the country to stage bhony drug seizures and generate false news reports to help DEA agents gain the confidence of drug jords, the Houston Chronicle re ported Sunday. DEA spokesman Maurice Hill in Washington, D.C., said the tech nique is employed in high drug traf fic areas nationwide, including Flor ida and Texas. “It’s a procedure that is used, but can’t begin to tell you with what frequency,” Hill said. It’s not a new technique, I can tell you that.” The practice of staging the bogus [seizures and feeding the informa tion to news reporters apparently tame into practice several years ago [to resolve a dilemma for undercover • drug agents posing as cocaine im- orters for Colombian drug lords, According to the copyright report. Often the DEA operatives deliver [the drugs according to instructions from Colombian exporters and keep [the shipment under surveillance in [hopes of intercepting it before it hits [the streets, officials said. But the DEA sometimes ensures that drugs never reach the street by “dropping the load” in cooperation with local authorities, who stage phony seizures and allow the under cover operation to proceed without detection, the newspaper said. Newspaper clippings generated by the tactic are used to provide cover stories for agents, according to the Chronicle, which determined at least two highly publicized seizures in the Houston area had been staged. “The Colombians, the only way they’ll believe you is to show them the stuff (drugs), the money or the newspaper clips,” Hill said. Harris County Sheriff Johnny Klevenhagen said local police agen cies use the tactic only at the request of the DEA. He praised the bogus seizures as productive in taking illicit drugs off the street. Because of its success, he said, the practice has gained widespread na tional acceptance. “DEA-Houston is only one fin ger,” he said. “This is going on all across the United States.” While law enforcement agencies defend the ruses on grounds that they preserve investigations and protect agents, journalists say the scams raise ethical questions about government deception of the news media and the public. Houston Chronicle Managing Ed itor Tony Pederson acknowledged that extraordinary measures are necessary to fight drug trafficking, but said government agencies must maintain credibility. “If the DEA is willing to lie to the media and public about this issue,” Pederson said, “what else might they be willing to lie about?” The practice also carries implica tions about the final responsibility for the actions of government agents, journalists said. “We almost have a shadow gov ernment in addition to the govern ment of the people,” Will Norton, chairman of the journalism depart ment at the University of Mississippi, said of the drug agents’ actions. “There seems to have been no ac countability in the entire process,” Pederson added. “At least some type of judicial review has always been necessary for other elements of law enforcement deception, the key ex ample being wiretaps. But who, if anyone, has reviewed this process?” In 1984, DEA agents helped smuggle 952 pounds of cocaine into the country, then abandoned their van at a prearranged Harris County roadblock set up by the Texas De partment of Public Safety, the Chronicle reported. On Aug. 2, 1984, the DPS alerted news report ers that troopers had found a cache of drugs described at the time as one of Texas’ largest seizures. Alan Spears, one of the state troopers who made the 1984 seizure, said he never was told that it was staged. Apparently, it is not uncommon for the officers directly involved in the seizure to be used as unwitting participants. Former preacher describes battle with incest, fight to see children reach in and nr the “death lied and made think about y’l g into the ve irritated me yhat ever lead of tearing!! lamp, now our a sophomore, couple of years, e your liberal say, “Thanksfor ‘i-yourself and ire jealous and Four-car accident hurts 2 at bonfire A four-car accident left two men pinned between vehicles before bon fire on Nov. 22. Jeffrey Cox, a 24-year-old Texas |A&M computer systems manager pom College Station, and Mark De part, a 28-year-old assistant lecturer pom Fort Worth, were pinned by the tailgate of a truck at about 7 p.m. pn A&M student attempting to park p Jersey Street struck another car, phich caused a chain-reaction acci dent, police reports said. The student was maneuvering to barallel park along the eastbound brb of Jersey Street near Dexter Drive. She apparently placed her loot on the gas pedal instead of the brake and struck a parked pick-up truck. Cox, who was seated in a lawn chair between a Dodge Daytona and a Ford Bronco, and DeHart, who was seated on the Bronco’s tailgate, were trapped between the vehicles when the pick-up hit the Daytona. Cox was taken to St. Joseph hospi tal in Bryan, complaining of pain in his back, the report said. He was treated and released that night, hos pital sources said. DeHart was not injured. As of Sunday night, no charges had been pressed against the driver, College Station police said. DALLAS (AP) — Lewis Charles Elliott, a former minister and father of 18 children, sometimes cries when he looks at pictures of them. “This one I’ve never seen,” he said. “She was born after they put me in jail.” The 53-year-old Elliott has been sentenced to prison and has had to give up his parental rights because he is not just the children’s father. In most cases, in the eyes of the law, he is also their grandfather. Elliott, a building contractor and former Baptist minister in south Dallas, admitted to fathering 13 chil dren with his three adopted daugh ters. He also had five children with his wife. Although he said he loves his fam ily and hopes someday “we’ll all be together again,” Elliott conceded he was “addicted” to incest. “The state can’t take away the love we have — just like they can’t take my blood out of those kids,” Elliott told the Dallas Times Herald during an hour-long interview in the Dallas County Jail. “I know people have trouble un derstanding this, but I was a good fa ther,” he said. “I took care of the family. “Preachers make mistakes like ev eryone else,” he said. “I never told anybody I was perfect. I didn’t in- “This year FI! get organized!’ it. mments and Hal ustion. Who ill/George Sraitb, Smith A A se, by all means, :‘ach you to do it najor, but it ead in the Nov. is Morning New ake it true. Whs ed their source ruth before you u are aware tha cross the at have I also am not isn’t true. Ifitiv m to the ed, in this •hi to edit letters for sM ted and must induitto I Breathejl | OKflY'l'MOff} KJV M VP! 3ACKItil{ m mmmm\ Msmj And this year I really mean it. So Fm buying _ _ my self an IBM ? Personal System/2® computer to help me do everything from organizing notes and revising papers to creating high-quality graphics, and more. And not only is this IBM PS/2 easy to learn and use, but if Fm eligible, Fll save up to 40% with my discount. Who knows, with this IBM PS/2,1 may be so organized even my socks will match. FREE box of diskettes and diskette case with purchase of a PS/2. Hurry-supplies are limited. See the MicroComputerCenter for details. MicroComputerCenter Computer Sales and Supplies Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Memorial Student Center IBM and Personal System/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. vent incest. . . . After experiencing it,, it was just like drugs; it went too far.” Court records indicate Elliott be gan having sex with his adopted daughters as they reached adoles cence and continued for about 15 years. The records also indicate he used violence and threats to control family members and keep the matter secret. After being sentenced to 50 years in prison in the first molestation trial, Elliott said he decided not to contest the remaining charges be cause “I didn’t want the kids dragged into this.” But he insists that his only crime was incest and said some of the youngsters still send him money in jail, where he awaits transfer to state prison. Elliott said he didn’t actually con sider the acts criminal because the young women were not his natural children. Nor was the arrangement bigamy, he said. “I never did consider them my wives,” Elliott said, “I just considered we were having sex. “The only thing that led me (to commit incest) was that human in stinct in me,” Elliott said. “I was just like any other man.” Crime Stoppers request help solving murder of manager On Friday, Nov. 11 at 7:30 a.m., the clean-up crew for the Schulman 6 Theater discovered the body of the theater manager, Don Craven, seated at his desk. He had been shot in the head with a medium-caliber handgun. Co-workers at the theater, located at 2000 E. 29th Street in Bryan, re ported that they had last seen Cra ven alive at 12:30 a.m. when they left the theater after work. Evidence in dicates that the manager had been counting the daily receipts at the time of his death and that the sus pects) stole an undisclosed amount of cash after shooting the manager. No viable suspects have yet been identified; however, investigators believe that the suspect(s) may have been known to the manager and that the manager’s 1984 maroon Plym outh Voyager van may have been used by the suspect(s) before the murder and then left parked on the northwest side of the theater. This week, the Bryan Police De partment and Crime Stoppers need your help to identify the person(s) responsible for this capital murder. If you have information that could be helpful, call Crime Stoppers at 775-TIPS. When you call, Crime Stoppers will assign you a special coded num ber to protect your identity. If your call leads to an arrest and grand jury indictment. Crime Stoppers will pay you up to $1,000. Crime Stoppers also pays cash for information about any felony crime or the location of any wanted fugitive. 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