| A Houston Drug Cop's Lies Sent This Man to Prison for 25 Years The case shows how lax  supervisors, incurious prosecutors, deferential judges, credulous  jurors, and inattentive defense attorneys abet police misconduct.
 Four years ago, Frederick Jeffery was sentenced to 25 years in prison  for possessing five grams of methamphetamine—a bit more than the weight  of a single sugar packet. That draconian punishment, which was enhanced  based on prior convictions, was appalling enough by itself. But now it  turns out that Jeffery was convicted based on lies, as he has always  insisted.
 
 Harris County, Texas, Judge Stacy M. Allen yesterday  recommended that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals reverse Jeffery's conviction,  saying  it resulted from "a pattern of deceit involving fictional drug buys,  perjured search warrant affidavits, and false testimony to a jury." The  Houston narcotics officer who framed Jeffery, Gerald Goines, is the same  corrupt cop who used similar methods to instigate a January 2019  drug raid that killed Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas, a middle-aged couple whom Goines  falsely accused of selling heroin from their home at 7815 Harding Street.
 
 "Frederick Jeffery's case is a due process disaster,"  said  Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg. "In the wake of Harding  Street, it is clear that Gerald Goines and other members of the Houston  Police Department Narcotics Division engaged in a years-long scheme  involving fictional drug buys, perjured warrants and phony overtime.  Individuals like Frederick Jeffery were collateral damage."
 
 Jeffery's case is about more than one bad cop. His arrest and  conviction show how lax supervisors, incurious prosecutors, deferential  judges, credulous jurors, and inattentive defense attorneys let bad cops  send innocent people to prison...
 
 reason.com
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