South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Lawyer allegedly ‘saturated’ papers with cocaine to bring to inmates, court records say

- By Angie Dimichele

A South Florida attorney is accused of attempting to smuggle cocaine into the jail using papers disguised as legal documents, the Palm Beach County Sheriff ’s Office said.

David Casals, who practices in Palm Beach and Broward counties, is facing a first-degree felony charge of traffickin­g cocaine, a second-degree felony charge of delivery of cocaine and a third-degree felony charge of introducti­on of contraband into a county facility, according to the Sheriff ’s Office.

Casals is facing a maximum sentence of up to 50 years for the three felony charges combined. He turned himself into authoritie­s Friday.

Casals allegedly attempted to bring documents “saturated” with cocaine into the jail, detectives found through their investigat­ion, testing, interviews and search warrants, the Sheriff ’s Office said.

On Oct. 24, Casals was checking in as a visitor at the jail, and a deputy began to search the items he had with him, according to a probable cause affidavit. The deputy inspected a manila folder that contained 37 pieces of paper “with bible quotes and pictures of an unknown woman” on them.

The deputy noticed the papers were concealed under a cover sheet that “attempted to disguise the papers as a transcript­ion translatio­n” of an audio file for an inmate from Spanish to English, the affidavit says. As the deputy looked at the “swollen” pages, she noticed stains from a see-through substance that resembled water marks.

After notifying supervisor­s about the pages, two lieutenant­s arrived to look at them. Casals said “I hope there’s nothing in there that shouldn’t be,” according to the affidavit.

Authoritie­s took the pages and allowed Casals to meet with three inmates after telling him he could not give them anything, the affidavit says. But the deputy who inspected the pages was suspicious and watched the jail’s cameras.

The video showed Casals visited a fourth inmate who Casals did not say he was there to meet with, the affidavit says.

Another detective inspected the papers and said each page looked as if they were water stained and dried out. The detective tested a page for synthetic cannabinoi­ds, turning the page a yellow-brown color, revealing the presence of a mix of cannabinoi­ds, the affidavit says.

On Nov. 1, detectives received a report from a Sheriff’s Office forensic scientist that determined the two pieces of paper tested were positive for cocaine at a weight of 9.9 grams, the affidavit says. Four more pages were tested a few days later, bringing the total weight to 29.5 grams for the six pages tested.

Detectives in the past year have interviewe­d inmates about drugs being smuggled into the jail, the affidavit says. Inmates said in the past, several correction­s deputies would bring in drugs, but attorneys have begun to bring in contraband “by way of disguising the drugs onto papers” since several correction­s deputies were arrested for smuggling in drugs.

The inmates who spoke with detectives said the attorneys know the papers they’re carrying have substances on them and are paid by the inmates to bring the papers in, the affidavit says.

The affidavit says investigat­ions have found that

8.5-by-11 papers sprayed or soaked with cannabinoi­ds or other substances are selling for $1,000 for cannabinoi­ds to $3,000 for cocaine.

Papers “soaked with roach spray” have been brought in, the inmates said, according to the affidavit, and would smoke them. But that was poisoning inmates, hospitaliz­ing them and causing seizures or rendering them unresponsi­ve, the affidavit says. Some have stopped breathing and had to be treated for narcotics overdoses, the affidavit says.

The addiction to the “K-2 paper drug,” as inmates called it, is causing inmates to ask family members and those outside the jail to send them money to barter with other inmates for them or to buy the papers, the affidavit says.

Testing of all 37 pages showed a positive result of cocaine with a weight of over 136 grams, the chemist noting that the papers did not receive trace amounts but were rather “saturated with cocaine.” Nine of the papers tested were found to have no trace of controlled substances, the affidavit says.

Casals was released from the Palm Beach County Jail after posting a $58,000 bond, the Sheriff ’s Office said.

“The only comment I’ll make is he turned himself in, he bonded out and we’re going to plead not guilty,” Casals’ attorney, Michael Salnick, said.

According to Casals’ Florida Bar profile, he has not been discipline­d in the last

10 years.

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Casals

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