Veteran state narcotics agent Richard Parker will be retried on
charges of stealing 650 pounds of cocaine from an evidence locker and
selling it piecemeal through a former girlfriend, the U.S. attorney's
office said Tuesday.
Drug Agent to Be Retried in Cocaine Theft Case
The government's decision to retry Parker followed a stunning rebuff
two weeks ago when a jury voted 10 to 1 to acquit him on four charges
related to the theft from the state Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement office
in Riverside.
The lone holdout forced a judge to declare a mistrial on one count of
conspiracy and three counts of possessing narcotics for sale. The jury
voted unanimously to acquit Parker, 44, on two other counts of possessing
narcotics for sale and another charge of money laundering. But it
convicted Parker of filing a false tax return for 1997.
The judge set a meeting for next week to schedule a new trial date.
The income tax conviction, a felony, proved to be a stumbling block to
Parker's release on bond Tuesday. He has been held without bail since his
arrest on July 2, 1998.
At a hearing before U.S. District Judge Christina A. Snyder, Assistant
U.S. Atty. Beverly Reid O'Connell noted that because Parker was convicted
of a felony, the burden of proof fell to him to show that he is not a
flight risk or a threat to the community.
"He has not done that," she told the judge, who agreed.
Defense lawyer Richard A. Hamar said he would appeal Snyder's ruling
to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Parker was accused in the previous trial of stealing the cocaine
during a faked burglary over the July 4, 1997, weekend at the Bureau of
Narcotic Enforcement office in Riverside, where he worked. He did not
become a suspect until a year later when he was arrested in an unrelated
FBI drug sting.
Agents intercepted him as he drove out of a parking structure after
receiving $47,000 in cash from his former girlfriend, Monica L. Pitto,
40, of Hermosa Beach.