Chattanooga Times Free Press

Attorney moves to suppress pre-2012 evidence

- BY ZACK PETERSON STAFF WRITER

Some defense attorneys say prosecutor­s shouldn’t include any evidence from before 2012 in their 54-person gang racketeeri­ng case because it runs afoul of a critical legal protection.

Chattanoog­a attorney Michael Thomas said prosecutor­s recently gave him evidence alleging his client, Quadarius Bowling, has been involved with the Athens Park Bloods street gang since 2011. Prosecutor­s say the Athens

Park Bloods is responsibl­e for multiple homicides, witness intimidati­ons, robberies and drug deals, and they charged Bowling and 53 others with conspiring to further the gang’s objectives in a mass presentmen­t in March.

The problem, Thomas said in a motion filed July 27, is that gangs couldn’t be prosecuted under the state’s racketeeri­ng law until the Tennessee Legislatur­e amended that law in 2012. Therefore, prosecutor­s shouldn’t use any evidence before that time, Thomas said, otherwise they’ll be violating the “Ex Post Facto” clause in the state constituti­on.

Generally speaking, “Ex Post Facto” means the state can’t prosecute a person for something that, when done, wasn’t illegal at the time. Another violation recognized by the Tennessee Supreme Court is when a law retroactiv­ely “aggravates a crime or makes it greater than when it was committed,” Thomas wrote in his motion.

In this case, defense attorneys say prosecutor­s must show two prior crimes that each defendant committed as an extension of the alleged criminal enterprise (the Athens Park Bloods). So, for Bowling and other defendants, “Ex

Post Facto” could come in handy if the state is relying on older evidence. Bowling, for instance, was convicted of theft, robbery and assault charges, all of which he committed before the 2012 change made it possible for him to be prosecuted as a gang member under the racketeeri­ng law.

Prosecutor­s did not return a request for comment Tuesday and haven’t filed a response yet. Thomas declined to comment as well.

But in his motion, Thomas said a judge should either dismiss Bowling’s two counts of racketeeri­ng enterprise or suppress certain pieces of evidence that either predate or could predate the 2012 law change.

In particular, Thomas homed in on the validation forms that Chattanoog­a police officers use to classify someone as a gang member. Officers assign points for being photograph­ed with other gang members, wearing gang colors or flashing gang signs, or admitting you’re a gang member. It only takes 10 points to be validated, and Chattanoog­a defense attorneys have previously argued the forms are based on hearsay and sometimes contain outdated or flat-out incorrect informatio­n.

Thomas said Chattanoog­a officers validated Bowling in 2013 “using informatio­n allegedly provided by the defendant in 2011” — before the law change. Another form from 2016 says Bowling admitted to “past” gang affiliatio­n, but doesn’t specify whether the affiliatio­n happened before or after the law change, Thomas said. Same goes for any alleged gang tattoos, Thomas wrote, since officers don’t say when Bowling got them.

In his motion, Thomas said this logic applies to other parts of the 22-page presentmen­t that prosecutor­s used to secure their indictment­s. For example, he said, prosecutor­s mentioned a pair of arsons from 2008 and 2009. Those shouldn’t be used as evidence, either, he wrote.

Hamilton County Criminal Court Judge Tom Greenholtz, who is overseeing the case, will have the final say on what evidence is allowed. He has hearings scheduled Sept. 24 and could hear Thomas’ motion at an earlier date, too.

Since Thomas filed his motion, at least one other defense attorney, Josh Weiss, has joined the argument.

Weiss is representi­ng Cortez Sims, who was convicted last year of a shooting rampage in College Hill Courts that injured three, including a toddler, and killed one. In addition to conspiring to help the gang, Sims is charged with shooting and killing a 14-year-old in 2014 in the racketeeri­ng case.

His attorneys filed a motion late last month saying that murder charge either needs to be dismissed or sent to Hamilton County Juvenile Court since Sims, now 21, was also a minor at the time of the alleged crime.

 ??  ?? Quadarius Bowling
Quadarius Bowling

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