Imperial Valley Press

DA: Man innocent in case tied to ex-cop charged in raid

- BY JUAN A. LOZANO

HOUSTON — Prosecutor­s said Wednesday they believe a second person who was convicted based on what they allege is false testimony by an ex-Houston police officer whose cases are being reviewed following a 2019 deadly drug raid is actually innocent.

Steven Mallet had pleaded guilty in 2009 to a drug charge and was sentenced to 10 months in jail.

Mallet along with his brother, Otis Mallet, were both arrested in 2008 by Gerald Goines, who had testified he had bough t crack cocaine from the siblings.

Otis Mallet was sentenced to eight years in prison and later paroled.

Earlier this month, Otis Mallet was declared innocent by a judge after his attorneys and prosecutor­s agreed that Goines had lied during his trial about buying drugs from the brothers and had failed to provide evidence that would have helped their case.

Bob Wicoff, Steven Mallet’s attorney, said his client was “very happy”and “grateful” about the decision by prosecutor­s to find him innocent.

“Justice dictates that we continue going through questionab­le cases and clearing people convicted solely on the word of a police officer we can no longer trust,” said Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg. “When the only evidence of criminal culpabilit­y is the testimony of an untrustwor­thy officer, we are going to work as fast as possible to right the situation.”

In an affidavit, Steven Mallet, 61, said the allegation­s against him were “completely false” and he never met Goines.

“The prosecutor had previously offered me a plea deal if I agreed to say my brother Otis had done what they said, but I refused because it wasn’t true,” Mallet said. “Finally, I pleaded guilty only because I wanted to get out. I had to plead guilty to something that never happened.”

Nicole DeBorde, Goines’ attorney, said she was disappoint­ed by Ogg’s decision to publicize the decision in Steven Mallet’s case and that it was being done to damage her client’s ability to get a fair trial from an unbiased jury.

The accusation­s by the Mallet brothers are similar to ones made against Goines related to the January 2019 drug raid in which Dennis Tuttle, 59, and Rhogena Nicholas, 58, were killed. Prosecutor­s allege Goines lied to obtain the warrant to search the couple’s home by claiming that a confidenti­al informant had bought heroin there.

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