Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Lawyer [Dick Harpootlian]: S.C. police targeting Phelps

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Lawyer [Dick Harpootlian]: S.C. police targeting Phelps

    Lawyer: S.C. police targeting Phelps

    Eight arrested in investigation

    Baltimore Sun
    February 13, 2009

    By Kevin Van Valkenburg and Childs Walker, Baltimore Sun reporters

    South Carolina authorities continue to gather evidence from a party
    attended by Michael Phelps in November at which he was photographed
    allegedly smoking marijuana, but even as more arrests are made and
    witnesses interviewed, what's still unclear is what might happen to
    the 23-year-old Olympic swimmer.

    A lawyer representing a man who attended the party said the Richland
    County Sheriff's Department investigation seems to be targeting Phelps
    - to the point investigators are asking questions only about the
    14-time gold-medal winner.

    But Phelps, who has hired a lawyer, hasn't been charged with anything
    or been contacted by the sheriff's department, according to Drew
    Johnson, a representative from Phelps' management company, Octagon.

    The Richland County Sheriff's Department has arrested eight people who
    attended the party near the University of South Carolina, according to
    Dick Harpootlian, a Columbia, S.C., defense attorney and former
    district attorney in Richland County. Harpootlian represents one of
    the men who was at the party and was a renter at the house where the
    party took place.


    His client was arrested last weekend at another house, where police
    found a small amount of marijuana.

    "All of the questions they asked him were related to Phelps,"
    Harpootlian said.

    That left the attorney with no doubt investigators are making arrests
    in an attempt to gather information about the swimmer.

    "There's no question that this would not have occurred the way it did
    if Michael Phelps was not involved," said Harpootlian, who oversaw
    many drug cases as a prosecutor. "It's silly that they've taken eight
    kids and arrested them like this. I don't think it's a valid use of
    very limited law enforcement resources."

    Richland County authorities - namely Sheriff Leon Lott, who publicly
    vowed that Phelps would receive no special treatment because of his
    celebrity - have not said what charge Phelps might be facing. Under
    South Carolina law, possession of one ounce or less of marijuana is a
    misdemeanor that carries a fine of up to $200 and 30 days in jail for
    the first offense. Possession of drug paraphernalia is a $500 fine.

    Jack Swerling, a criminal defense attorney who has practiced in
    Columbia for more than 30 years, said he has known Lott for 30 years
    and called him an "honorable" man who is in a difficult position.

    "I think you have to consider that having this news in an English
    newspaper put Columbia, South Carolina, on the map in a way no one
    wanted," Swerling said. "Here's the sheriff of our county, and
    everybody is looking at this big pot party in Columbia. Does he do
    nothing and get criticized for that? Or does he do something and get
    criticized for that? He's kind of damned if he do and damned if he
    don't."

    Swerling said simple possession charges are usually handled one of two
    ways if the defendant has no prior drug offenses.

    Many cases are sent to pretrial diversion, meaning the defendant
    submits to drug counseling and testing for a short time. Once the
    requirements are completed, charges are usually dismissed and wiped
    from the defendant's record. In other cases, the defendant pleads
    guilty but a judge withholds the sentence for 90 days and orders urine
    tests and possibly community service. Again, the charges are usually
    expunged from the defendant's record once those requirements are met.

    "I would be shocked if this case is handled any other way. I don't
    foresee any circumstance where jail is even a possibility," Swerling
    said. "The same rules should apply, whether we're talking about
    Michael Phelps or not."

    Harpootlian said he has asked investigators why they're acting the way
    they are.

    "They say that no one is above the law," he said. "But this isn't a
    question of someone getting preferential treatment to his
    benefit. He's getting treated differently to his detriment."

    Kenneth W. Gaines, a professor at the University of South Carolina law
    school with expertise in criminal procedure, said he sees no chance
    that Phelps will face anything worse than a simple possession charge
    but thinks the swimmer could do himself a favor by turning himself in.

    "Cut them off at the pass," Gaines said. "You say, 'I'm doing this
    because kids look up to me and I want them to see me abiding by the
    law.' ... Why let all of this draw out? On the legal side, he's not
    going to be hurt at all."

    If Phelps were charged and decided to fight it, a case against him
    would almost certainly have to be built using witness testimony,
    according to Andrew D. Levy, a Maryland criminal defense lawyer and
    adjunct faculty member at the University of Maryland School of Law,
    where he teaches criminal law.

    Levy characterized the investigation as "a little silly" but tried to
    explain what the sheriff's motives might be.

    "It could simply be an effort by a local elected official to get his
    name in the paper. ... But here is what I think the sheriff would say:
    Because Michael Phelps is not a normal person, because he's the
    world's most famous athlete, it makes the consideration to prosecute
    by that law enforcement official different. Because he is so famous,
    it makes the harm that can flow from his conduct, and a failure to
    prosecute him for that conduct, that much greater."
Working...
X