Folder
Northern District of Georgia, No. C87-151A - Witnesses - Dorsey, Sidney
Working File
January 1, 1987
56 pages
Cite this item
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Case Files, McCleskey Background Materials. Northern District of Georgia, No. C87-151A - Witnesses - Dorsey, Sidney, 1987. 8a89e0b1-62a7-ef11-8a69-6045bdd667da. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/384b9c41-2247-4c93-9f7d-214c52ab4662/northern-district-of-georgia-no-c87-151a-witnesses-dorsey-sidney. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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THE WITNESS: Sidney Dorsey.
EXAMINATION
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Officer Dorsey, what's your current
employment?
A I'm assigned to Zone 2 on the day
watch,
Q That's with the Atlanta Bureau of
Police Services?
A That's correct.
Q And in 1978 what was your responsi-
bility, what were your duties?
A I was a detective in Homicide.
Q Okay. When did you first become
involved in the case of Warren McCleskey, the
investigation into the death of Officer Schlatt?
A I think {it was the following Monday.
recall I was working a part-time job in the Five
Points area, and the reason I remember, I
remember the cars going past me rather fast on
that particular day, and I think being as I was
off on Saturdays and Sundays, apparently I
started my part of the investigation on that
following Monday.
I
Q And the Five Point area is near the
Dixie Furniture Store where the crime took place?
A A few miles east of it.
Q Who was your partner at that time?
A Best that’l can recall it may have been
Qarris.) I don't remember exactly.
Q I believe Mr. Harris gave testimony
that his partner at the time had been Mr. Jowers.
A It may have been. We get together
occasionally.
Q What was the relationship among the
three of you with respect to this investigation?
Who was in charge?
A Well, Jowers was the lead investigator
Primarily because the case was assigned to him.
Q All right. And so you took orders in a
sense from Jowers, or did You work independently?
A No, I didn't take orders from Jowers.
We had a very investigative and cooperative
relationship and in that light we shared
information and we worked together. I think
Lieutenant Perry, W. K. Perry, was in charge of
the Homicide Squad, and at that time if there
were any orders given they came directly from
him. But generally we all sort of worked on our
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own, There was very seldom, if any, orders ever
given,
Q 80 it was a sense that you might go
places that they wouldn't go, or you'd all go
en
together as a team or --
A That's right, That's right. And {if ve
found it necessary to bring someone along
concerning an investigative matter, then we'd
team up. Sometimes one at a time, sometimes
three at a time, depending on what the subject
matter may have been.
Q And you all must have talked to dozens
of witnesses in this case; is that right?
A Probably more than that.
Q Okay. Did you talk to any of them by
yourself, you know, without other officers
present?
A I don't recall.- I don't recall. 1
probably did.
Q Okay. There was a person by the name
of Offie Evane~who ultimately you came in contact
with; is that correct?
A I know Offie Evans.
Q Did you know him prior to this case?
A I think so.
Q And what was the basis of that, from
the street or =--
A Again, I don't remember why, for what
reason I was investigating something, but it
seems that sometime, I guess prior to 1978, I had
wll
an occasion to go to the Federal institution on
Boulevard and I went to a Balfway House. Now, I
don't remember who was with me. I think I was
accompanied by another detective. I was thinking
it was Harris but I don't know who it was, I
don't recall,
I don't remember why I went there to
investigate or what the investigative inquiry was
about, but I think {it was that time that I first
met Offie Evans. And I didn't go there
specifically to meet him. I think I must have
gone in search of something or in search of
someone or to get some information and based on
my -- the little time that I was there, I think
it was at that time that I met him for the first
time.
Q And was he at that time incarcerated or
at least housed in that institution?
A I think so, yes.
Q And was this the Federal C.T.P.
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facility, is that what it was called?
A I don't know what it was called at the
time. I think his -- I think where he was housed
as a Halfway House and I think the Pederal
institution is right next door.
Q Okay And this was, what, in the spring
of 19787
A I don't remember whether it was spring,
winter, or anything. I just remember it was -- I
think that was the first time I ever met him. I
remember seeing him again, and this time I think
he was out and he was at some woman's house and I
think he must have called me there. I don't
remember how, unless I just happened to have gone
there and he was there, which surprised me,
someplace around Mount Zion or Poole Creek Road,
I don't remember exactly where the location was.
I don't remember who the woman was and I don't
remember why I was there, except I remember
seeing him there and we talked briefly.
And then I think on another occasion
while he was again incarcerated, I saw him again
and just ran into him down at the City Court and
he was there again having recently been
incarcerated and I spoke to him.
And then on another occasion or two he
may have called me when he wag incarcerated to
come to see him or something, but I don't
remember why.
Q 80 you had a kind of acquaintance --
not friendship exactly, but a cordial
relationship?
A Yeah, I knew him and ~- I knew him and
he was the kind of person that if he called me
I'd go see him.
Q Right, This was all -- these
encounters you're describing all were prior to
the Officer Schlatt/McCleskey case; is that
right?
A I can't honestly say whether all of
these encounters were before. I'm thinking that
-- I'm thinking that the first time I met him
initially was before the McCleskey matter, the
Schlatt matter. I'm thinking that some of the
matters, some of the times that I talked to him
and saw him came after.
Q All right, Now, when you first met him
at this Halfway House, were you in Homicide then
or were --
A Yes. I'm sure of that.
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Q Would this have been a -homicide
investigation or it might have been a drug
investigation?
A It was probably a homicide
investigation and I don't remember which one,
because that was all I was doing at the time.
Q Did you interview him when you went out
there, to your best recollection?
A I probably did talk to him and he may
have offered me some information, but I honestly
don't recall what case 1 was working, I don't
remember what he told me, I don't remember what I
had on, I don't remember what he had on. I don't
remember anything.
Q But he was the person over the years
that would provide occasionally useful
information to the department?
A He has -- he has -- he has on occasjons
that I can recall been cooperative with me.
Q Right. And so when he called you'd
come see him because it might well be the
prospect of some information?
A Yeah, yeah. I'd see him or hear from
him £rom time to time.
[—
Q Now, do you have any personal notes
that you keep about what you do everyday? Any
diary or log or that sort of thing?
A Not now.
Q When you say not now, did you --
- A What I mean is I don't -- I don't have
records, those kinds of records, that 1 may have
had nine or ten years ago. I don't have those.
Q You've looked in response to
subpoenaes?
A Yes, because, you know, since '78 I've
gone through three or four or five different
assignments and I just don't have those any more.
Q Do you have any official files, apart
from the files that the department itself keeps?
A No, sir.
Q Okay. Have you ever been able to use
Mr, Evans as a witness in a case before? I mean,
if you've gotten information from him, did you
ever actually ~-- gotten information that wound up
with his testifying in a case?
A No, sir,
Q Okay. But he was -- does the
department keep a list of people who are useful
informants or is it more a question of the
detectives know from their experience who it is
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they can count on in those situations?
A It's generally a detective's individual
relationship with the parties. It's nothing
par
that's shared blanketly throughout the whole
department, There's no file drawer that says
hax els the case of a guy -- here are a list of
people that you can contact if you have an
incident out here, no. It's generally the
individual policeman's or detective's own plot.
Q 80 you build up a kind of rapport --
A Rapport with your own people.
(Whereupon, a discussion ensued off
the record.)
THE COURT: Okay. I'm going to have
to suspend in a few minutes, You pick a
break time. I've got a sentencing. You
pick a good time to break.
MR. BOGER: This is fine, Your Honor,
to suit your convenience.
THE COURT: All right, We'll recess
for five minutes,
(Whereupon, a recess was taken.)
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Offie Evans, during the spring of 1978
was in a Halfway House in Atlanta.
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A Yes, sir. -
Q Serving out the last portion of a
sentence for forgery that had been imposed on him
in 1973, And the information that he provided at
trial was that he was, in part, working with some
Agents on a drug case at the same time. When he
was out during the day he was involved in those
activities.
Did you know about his situation in the
spring of 19787
A No, sir, 1 didn't,
Q Had you been aware that he had served
as an informer and assistant to other agents of
other State and Federal Government in addition to
your relationship with him?
A I was not aware of that.
Q Okay. At some point, apparently, Mr.
Evans walked away from the Halfway House and a
Federal escape warrant went out for him and he
was at some point in early July apparently
brought back into custody, he was arrested.
TBE COURT: Excuse me. You said a
Federal state warrant. I don't think
there is such a thing.
MR. BOGER: I meant to say a Federal
escape warrant, *
TBE COURT: To the best of my knowl-
edge it was a Federal warrant.
MR. BOGER: Federal warrant for escape
- 1] meant, Your Honor, excuse me,
THE COURT: Oh, Federal escape. §
misunderstood you,
MR. BOGER: I may have misspoken,
BY MR. BOGER:
Q You said in the past on occasion he had
given you a call. Did he call you once he was
taken back into custody?
A I don't think I knew that he was ever
wanted to anything or had ever escaped. You
know, what you're telling me now is very much new
to me.
Q Okay. But he found himself in the
Fulton County Jail in July of 1978, Did you go
see him at any point in July?
A Counselor, I _do not recall going to see
Offie Evans at the Fulton County Jail during that
time or any time.
Q Do you remember any meeting that might
have been held between Mr. Evans and yourself and
Detective Harris and Russell Parker at the jail?
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A Counselor, in all honesty, I do not.
Q Nelli, let me Show you a document and
see if it will help refresh your recollection.
This is a copy of the Plaintiff's Exhibit 9 which
is in evidence. Do you recognize that document?
A I don't recognize this document as
being my particular document. It appears to be
someone's notes but they certainly aren't mine.
Q Let me ask you to examine it briefly
and see if the contents of the documents at all
refresh your recollection about a meeting that
might have been held with Offie Evans at the
Fulton County Jail.
Let me actually give you the original
of which that's a copy, if you don't mind,
Officer. Let me direct your attention to the
third or rather the fourth page of the little
notes at the beginning, the little white notes
that are appended by staple to the eight-and-a-
half by thirteen legal page.
A Fourth. page?
= Q That's right, It says notes at the top
in a box.
A All right. Py 24.9
Q Let me direct your attention to the
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bottom of that. It Bays interview by Detective
8idney Dorsey, Detective Harris, R. J. Park and
Deputy C. K. Hamilton. DO you remember that
EE
interview?
- A don't.
No knowledge or recollection at all?
Q
A I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Q Okay. Now, look over the notes. Those
notes purported to be notes that Mr. Parker took
at a meeting which ended -- look over the rest of
the notes and see if that jogs your recollection.
(Brief pause.)
A (Continuing) All right. As I sat
—
I
around all day yesterday, last night, this
florning and today and I still don't recall.
bb Q Well, you testified you knew Offie
Evans, you knew him beforehand and you had,
really, you had kind of worked with him on some
other matters. And at least with respect to the
Warren McCleskey case you don't remember this
particular meeting. Now, 1 focused in on one
meeting.
"ih A I'm not suggesting that the meeting
SL a ——
didn't take place, nor am I suggesting that I
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wasn't there, I just don't recall being there
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and for some reason no one else remembers my
being there either.
Q How do you know that?
A I had spoken to Russ Parker a couple of
days ago and -- you know, just in talking to him,
I don't recall, you know, being there.
Q Okay. So you and Mr. Parker had talked
over this matter at some point prior to the
testimony here?
A Yes.
Q Well, let me ask you this: You do
recall, don't you, meeting with Mr. Evans at some
point during the investigation of this case?
A During the investigation of this case?
Q This case,
A I've talked to Offie Evans and it's
been a long time since I've seen him anyway, but
I've talked to him over the years during certain
cases. I don't know on what case I spoke to him
about and I ce don't recall whether it was
——
this particular case. I probably did, but I
LT —
don't-remewBber, I probably did, but I honestly
don't remember,
— Q If you had some documents or notes that
might help you refresh your recollection?
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A If 1 had my own notes, Jf I had my own
documents, if there was something in the
supplementaries that was brought to you on
yesterday, that is the police documents, that
there was some documentation in the D.A.'s file
that I could look at that would say that that's
something that I had did, that spoke to that,
then yes, that might help me. But based on what
I -- based on my own recollection, I don't recall
any of that.
Q Now, other folks on the force -- you
said you worked in a way independently and yet
Other officers
————
on the force must have known that you had this
you collaborated with each other.
kind of relationship with Offie Evans, that you'd
known him from the past.
A I don't think so.
Q TT they had told you we've got a fellow
S——
that we've heard may have some information, his
name is Offie Evans, you would have volunteered
at that point, well, I know Evans, I've talked to
Evans before.
A Probably.
Q So if they had given you the
information that they knew that Evans was around,
you would have conveyed back what you knew of
Evans,
A I may have {f they had wanted -~- if
they had asked me whether or not I felt that he
was credible or not or whether he was reliable, I
would give them my opinion.
Q Your opinion was that he was reliable?
A 1 would think -=- I don't recall him
telling me anything that I found to be -- not to
be true. And I don't remember anything right now
that he has told me except that I don't -- based
on my gut feeling concerning what our
relationship was, I don't -- 1 never remember him
having told me anything that I found later not to
be true.
Q All right. Some people you find are
pretty unreliable informants and --
A Yeah, and 80 -- and if that's the case
then if they -- if they -- generally you
disassociate yourself with them one way or the
other because otherwise it's a waste of time.
Q Right, They're not providing
information that really helps you get to the
bottom of things. You know, Mr. Evans testified
in this case eventually and talked about -- were
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you present at that trial? Were you called as a
witness, do you remember?
A No.
Q Okay. Mr. Evans also testified in
state habeas corpus proceedings, Did you attend
that proceedings?
A No.
Q During that proceeding Mr. Evans spoke
about conversations that he had had with you at
the time that the investigation was going on.
And he mentioned a particular conversation, let
me refer you to it, Page 122 of the State habeas
corpus transcript. I know you said you weren't
here and so you didn't have this information.
Let me show you what Mr. Evans said.
If you could read just that into the
record from Mr, Stroup starts asking.
M8. WESTMORELAND: Your Honor, for
the record purposes at this time I would
object to any intent to reopen any Giglio
issue that might be involved.
THE COURT: You're giving it to him
to refresh his recollection --
M8. WESTMORELAND: If that's the
purpose of it I don't have an objection,
but I do object to reopening the Giglio
claim.
THE COURT: I would obviously sustain
that objection but beyond that it's
unnecessary for him to read it into the
record to refresh his recollection.
MR. BOGER: Well, Your Honor, of
course our position, and we respect Your
Honor's ruling on it, is the Giglio matter
could be reopened under normal use if the
kind of principles of newly developed
evidence is present.
THE COURT: I'm with you on that to
begin with and obviously was favorably
disposed and I have given that issue every
ounce of favorable consideration that I
can give you and I can't find any way you
can do it.
MR. BOGER: I understand Your Honor's
ruling but I do think this bears on
relationships that --
THE COURT: Because it is an instance
of Office Evans testifying that he talked
with Dorsey I think he ought to be able to
look at it and see if that refreshes his
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recollection as to any conversation.
MR. BOGER: That's my purpose, Your
Honor.
TBE COURT: To that extent you
certainly may show it to him and he can
read it and state whether his recollection
is refreshed,
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Do you recall that conversation?
A No, I don't. By
Q Do you have any reason to doubt the
conversation took place that Mr, Evans testified
under oath at the trial that he had had a meeting
with you at which a discussion of that sort took
place?
A I do not recall this meeting nor do I
== nor can I understand why I would make him such
—
a promise,
Q But you don't have any recollection of
it at this time is what you're saying?
em o
A No, I don't,
Q okay. If Mr. Evans of course was
p=
(Jeenereving at that point back in 1981 we're here
six years later in 1987. Your testimony is, 1
CL —
take it from what you previously said, that it's
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possible that you did meet with Mr. Evans on some
——
occasion during the investigation of this case.
A Yes, this {is fecy possible.)
Q And that it in that sense remembrance
of Mr. Evans could reflect that meeting that you
had with him at that- ev?
a
A Cit could be.
Q Okay. Do you -- you also testified, I
believe, that you don't recall meeting Mr. Evans
at any time at the jail, because I had said on
July the 12th at the jail.
Did you meet with him anywhere, at the
Atlanta Bureau of Police Services offices or the
Fulton County Courthouse?
A I -- no, 1 don't recall. Am I assuming
he was in custody?
Q Either in custody on the street in the
spring or the summer of 1978?
A No, I don't.reme r ever meeting him
out. I think the only time I remember seeing
Offie Evans outside of being in custody was at a
woman's house, 1 think, somewhere around Mount
Zion Road or Poole Creek area, That's the only
time I ever remember seeing him out. I think
every other time I've ever heard mention of Offie
Evans he's always been in custody someplace.
Q Let me ask you one question about
procedure, and I simply don't know the answer to
this. When you go to see an inmate say of the
jail, Fulton County Jail, you're a police
officer, do you have to sign in and sign out?
A Yes.
Q S50 you make a contemporary record at
that point.
A That's correct.
Q So if we were able to obtain those
records it would conceivably, as you indicated
earlier, help refresh your recollection about
when you had spoken with somebody.
A Yeah.
Q Do you have to write the name of the
inmate at that time or do you simply write
Officer --
A No, I think we have to write the name
of the party that we're to visit.
Q Okay. . Does {t ever happen that you go
to visit one person and you wind up, because you
know several people in the jail, kind of walking
from cell to cell?
A I think it's happened. I think I've
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been upstairs and asked the deputy {f he would
get some other guy. B80 I seem to Lemember having
done that before.
Q Okay. Instead of going three or floors
back --
A Rather than come right on back
downstairs I stay Up and ask them to let me gee
8Omeone else,
MR. BOGER;: Excuse me one second,
Judge,
(Whereupon, a discussion ensued off
the record.)
THE COURT; Let me ask you: At any
time did you ever -- let me give you
context, One of the notes I seen which
isn't in evidence, somebody characterized
Offie Evans as being a Professional snitch
and from what You've testified I gather
eu thought of him normally that he usually
was informing when he was in trouble, from
what you've. told me,
Did there Come a time when you did
anything, directly or indirectly, to prompt
him to obtain evidence from McCleskey while
they were in Jail?
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THE WITNESS: NO, Sir. -
THE COURT: Know of anything like that
being done?
THE WITNESS: I don't know of anything
of my own personal knowledge, of anything.
THE COURT: Have you ever heard of
anything like that --
THE WITNESS: No, 8ir,.
THE COURT: -=- In this case?
——
BY MR. BOGER: .
Q Let me follow up on that, though. Your
testimony has also been you don't even remember
meeting with Offie Evans during this period at
all?
A No.
Q Okay. Even though {it may well have
been that you did so because there are the
documents that reflect that?
A Yes,
edie O GER" I don't have any further
questions of the witness,
THE COURT: Do you have anything,
Mary Beth?
MS. WESTMORELAND: Just one moment,
Your Honor.
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I don't have any questions, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: All right, You're excused.
THE WITNESS: Thank you.
(Whereupon, the witness was excused
from the witness stand.)
TBE COURT: Call your next witness.
MR. BOGER: Russell Parker, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: In view of all the bloody-
shirt rhetoric that's been associated with
this Court, I feel obliged to observe that
the three investigating officers are all
black.
MR. BOGER: I think most of our
evidence went to patterns of discrimina-
tion.
TBE COURT: I don't know what your
evidence was but I have certainly been
inundated by letters from people who are
being stirred up by somebody. I have read
an awful lot of the media coverage and an
awful of legal literature without going
any further, And any semblance between
what I heard in court and what has come in
and state your full name. -
THE WITNESS: S8idney Dorsey.
EXAMINATION
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Officer Dorsey, what's your current
employment?
A I'm assigned to Zone 2 on the day
watch.
Q That's with the Atlanta Bureau of
Police Services?
A That's correct.
Q And in 1978 what was your responsi-
bility, what were your duties?
A I was a detective in Homicide,
Q Okay. When did you first become
involved in the case of Warren McCleskey, the
investigation into the death of Officer Schlatt?
A I think it was the following Monday.
recall I was working a part-time job in the Five
Points area, and the reason I remember, I
remember the cars going past me rather fast on
that particular day, and I think being as I was
off on Saturdays and Sundays, apparently I
started my part of the investigation on that
following Monday.
I
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Q And the Five Point area is near the
Dixie Furniture Store where the crime took place?
A A few miles east of it.
Q Who was your partner at that time?
A Best that I can recall it may have been
Hatt is. I don't remember exactly.
Q I believe Mr, Harris gave testimony
that his partner at the time had been Mr. Jowers.
A It may have been. We get together
occasionally.
Q What was the relationship among the
three of you with respect to this investigation?
Who was in charge?
A Well, Jowers was the lead investigator
primarily because the case was assigned to him,
Q All right. And so you took orders in a
sense from Jowers, or did you work independently?
A No, I didn't take orders from Jowers.
We had a very investigative and cooperative
relationship and in that light we shared
information and we worked together. I think
Lieutenant Perry, W. K. Perry, was in charge of
the Homicide Squad, and at that time if there
were any orders given they came directly from
him. But generally we all sort of worked on our
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own. There was very seldom, if any, orders ever
given,
Q 8o it was a sense that you might go
places that they wouldn't go, or you'd all go
together as a team or --
A That's right, That's right, And {ff we
found it necessary to bring someone along
concerning an investigative matter, then we'd
team up. Sometimes one at a time, sometimes
three at a time, depending on what the subject
matter may have been.
Q And you all must have talked to dozens
of witnesses in this case; is that right?
A Probably more than that.
Q Okay. Did you talk to any of them by
yourself, you know, without other officers
present?
A I don't recall. I don't recall. I
probably dia.
Q Okay. There was a person by the name
of Offie Evans who ultimately you came in contact
with; 18 that correct?
A I know Offie Evans.
Q Did you know him prior to this case?
A I think so.
Q And what was the basisof that, from
the street or --
4 Again, I don't remember why, for what
reason I was investigating something, but it
seems that sometime, I guess prior to 1978, I had
an occasion to go to the Federal institution on
Boulevard and I went to a Balfway House. Now, I
don't remember who was with me. I think I was
accompanied by another detective. I was thinking
it was Harris but I don't know who it was. I
don't recall,
I don't remember why I went there to
investigate or what the investigative inquiry was
about, but I think {it was that time that I first
met Offie Evans, And I didn't go there
specifically to meet him. I think I must have
gone in search of something or in search of
someone Or to get some information and based on
my —- the little time that I was there, I think
it was at that time that I met him for the first
time.
Q And was he at that time incarcerated or
at least housed in that institution?
A I think so, yes.
Q And was this the Federal C.T.P.
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facility, is that what it was called?
A I don't know what it was called at the
time. I think his -- I think where he was housed
as a Halfway House and I think the Federal
institution is right next door.
Q Okay And this was, what, in the spring
of 19787?
A I don't remember whether it was spring,
winter, or anything. I just remember it was -- I
think that was the first time I ever met him. I
remember seeing him again, and this time I think
he was out and he was at some woman's house and I
think he must have called me there. I don't
remember how, unless I just happened to have gone
there and he was there, which surprised me,
someplace around Mount Zion or Poole Creek Road,
I don't remember exactly where the location was.
I don't remember who the woman was and I don't
remember why I was there, except I remember
seeing him there and we talked briefly,
And then I think on another occasion
while he was again incarcerated, I saw him again
and just ran into him down at the City Court and
he was there again having recently been
incarcerated and I spoke to him.
And then on another occasion or two he
may have called me when he was incarcerated to
come to see him or something, but I don't
remember why.
Q So you had a kind of acquaintance --
not friendship exactly, but a cordial
relationship?
A Yeah, I knew him and -- I knew him and
he was the kind of person that if he called me
I'd go see him.
Q Right, This was all -- these
encounters you're describing all were prior to
the Officer Schlatt/McCleskey case; is that
right?
A I can't honestly say whether all of
these encounters were before. I'm thinking that
== I'm thinking that the first time I met him
initially was before the McCleskey matter, the
Schlatt matter. I'm thinking that some of the
matters, some of the times that I talked to him
and saw him came after.
Q All right. Now, when you first met him
at this Halfway House, were you in Homicide then
orf were -—--
A Yes. I'm sure of that.
Q Would this have been a -homicide
investigation or it might have been a drug
investigation?
A It was probably a homicide
investigation and I don't remember which one,
because that was all I was doing at the time.
Q Did you interview him when you went out
there, to your best recollection?
A I probably did talk to him and he may
have offered me some information, but I honestly
don't recall what case 1 was working, I don't
remember what he told me, I don't remember what I
had on, I don't remember what he had on. I don't
remember anything.
Q But he was the person over the years
that would provide occasionally useful
information to the department?
A He has -- he has ~-- he has on occasions
that I can recall been cooperative with nme.
Q Right. And so when he called you'd
come see him because it might well be the
prospect of some information?
A Yeah, yeah. I'd see him or hear from
him from time to time.
Q Now, do you have any personal notes
that you keep about what you do everyday? Any
diary or log or that sort of thing?
A Not now.
Q When you say not now, did you --
- A What I mean is I don't -- I don't have
records, those kinds of records, that I may have
had nine or ten years ago. I don't have those.
Q You've looked in response to
subpoenaes?
A Yes, because, you know, since '78 I've
gone through three or four or five different
assignments and I just don't have those any more,
Q Do you have any official files, apart
from the files that the department itself keeps?
J 3 No, sir.
Q Okay. Have you ever been able to use
Mr. Evans as a witness in a case before? I mean,
if you've gotten information from him, did you
ever actually -- gotten information that wound up
with his testifying in a case?
A RO, Bir.
Q Okay. But he was -- does the
department keep a list of people who are useful
informants or is it more a question of the
detectives know from their experience who it is
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they can count on in those situations?
A It's generally a detective's individual
relationship with the parties. It's nothing
that's shared blanketly throughout the whole
department, There's no file drawer that says
Rare's the case of a guy -- here are a list of
people that you can contact if you have an
incident out here, no. It's generally the
individual policeman's or detective's own plot.
Q 80 you build up a kind of rapport --
A Rapport with your own people.
(Whereupon, a discussion ensued off
the record.)
THE COURT: Okay. I'm going to have
to suspend in a few minutes. You pick a
break time, I've got a sentencing. You
pick a good time to break.
MR. BOGER: Thia i8 fine, Your Honor,
to suit your convenience.
THE COURT: All right, We'll recess
for five minutes,
(Whereupon, a recess was taken,)
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Offie Evans, during the spring of 1978
was in a Halfway House in Atlanta.
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A Yes, sir. -
Q 8erving out the last portion of a
sentence for forgery that had been imposed on him
in 1973, And the information that he provided at
trial was that he was, in part, working with some
agents on a drug case at the same time. When he
was out during the day he was involved in those
activities.
Did you know about his situation in the
spring of 19787?
A NO, 8ir, 1 4idn't.
Q Had you been aware that he had served
as an informer and assistant to other agents of
other State and Federal Government in addition to
your relationship with him?
A I was not aware of that.
Q Okay. At some point, apparently, Mr.
Evans walked away from the Halfway House and a
Federal escape warrant went out for him and he
was at some point in early July apparently
brought back into custody, he was arrested.
THE COURT: Excuse me. You said a
Federal state warrant. I don't think
there is such a thing,
MR. BOGER: I meant to say a Federal
escape warrant, v
THE COURT: To the best of my knowl-
edge it was a Federal warrant.
MR. BOGER: Federal warrant for escape
1 meant, Your Honor, excuse me,
THEE COURT: Ooh, Federal escape. 3
misunderstood you.
MR. BOGER: 1 may have misspoken.
BY MR. BOGER:
Q You said in the past on occasion he had
given you a call. Did he call you once he was
taken back into custody?
A I don't think I knew that he was ever
wanted to anything or had ever escaped. You
know, what you're telling me now is very much new
to me.
Q okay. But he found himself in the
Fulton County Jail in July of 1978. Did you go
see him at any point in July?
A Counselor, 1 do not recall going to see
Offie Evans at the Fulton County Jail during that
time or any time.
Q Do you remember any meeting that might
have been held between Mr. Evans and yourself and
Detective Harris and Russell Parker at the jail?
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A Counselor, in all honesty, I do not.
Q Well, let me show you a document and
see if it will help refresh your recollection.
This is a copy of the Plaintiff's Exhibit 9 which
is in evidence. Do you recognize that document?
A I don't recognize this document as
being my particular document, It appears to be
someone's notes but they certainly aren't mine,
Q Let me ask you to examine it briefly
and see if the contents of the documents at all
refresh your recollection about a meeting that
might have been held with Offie Evans at the
Fulton County Jail.
Let me actually give you the original
of which that's a copy, if you don't mind,
Officer. Let me direct your attention to the
third or rather the fourth page of the little
notes at the beginning, the little white notes
that are appended by staple to the eight-and-a-
half by thirteen legal page.
A Fourth. page?
-Q That's right, It says notes at the top
in a box.
A All zight,
Q Let me direct your attention to the
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bottom of that. It says interview by Detective
8idney Dorsey, Detective Barris, R., J. Park and
Deputy C, K. Hamilton. DO you remember that
interview?
- A 1 don't.
Q NO knowledge or recollection at all?
A I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Q Okay. Now, look over the notes. Those
notes purported to be notes that Mr. Parker took
at a meeting which ended -- look over the rest of
the notes and see if that jogs your recollection.
(Brief pause.)
A (Continuing) All right, As I sat
around all day yesterday, last night, this
morning and today and I still don't recall.
Q Well, you testified you knew Offie
Evans, you knew him beforehand and you had,
really, you had. kind of worked with him on some
other matters. And at least with respect to the
Warren McCleskey case you don't remember this
particular meeting. Now, I focused in on one
meeting.
A I'm not suggesting that the meeting
didn't take place, nor am I suggesting that I
wasn't there. I just don't recall being there
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and for some reason no one else remembers mY
being there either.
Q How do you Know that?
A I had spoken to Russ parker a couple of
days ago and -- you know, just in talking to him,
I don't recall, you know, being there.
Q okay. So you and Mr. Parker had talked
over this matter at some point prior to the
testimony here?
A Yes.
Q Well, let me ask you this: You do
recall, don't you, meeting with Mr. Evans at some
point during the investigation of this case?
A purring the investigation of this case?
Q This case.
A I've talked to offie Evans and it's
been a long time since 1've seen him anyway, but
I've talked to him over the years during certain
cases. I don't know on what case I spoke to him
about and I certainly don't recall whether it was
this particular case. 1 probably did, but I
don't remember. 1 probably did, but 1 honestly
don't remember.
Q If you had some documents or notes that
might help you refresh your recollection?
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A 1f I had my own notes, if I had my own
documents, if there was something in the
supplementaries that was brought to You on
yesterday, that is the police documents, that
there was some documentation in the D.A.'s file
that I could look at that would say that that's
something that I had did, that spoke to that,
then yes, that might help me. But based on what
I -- based on my own recollection, I don't recall
any of that.
Q Now, other folks on the force -- you
said you worked in a way independently and yet
you collaborated with each other. Other officers
on the force must have known that you had this
kind of relationship with Offie Evans, that you'd
known him from the past.
A I don't think so.
Q If they had told you we've got a fellow
that we've heard may have some information, his
name is Offie Evans, you would have volunteered
at that point, well, I know Evans, I've talked to
Evans before,
A Probably.
Q So if they had given you the
information that they knew that Evans was around,
you would have conveyed back what you knew of
Evans.
A I may have {f they had wanted ~-- {if
they had asked me whether or not I felt that he
was credible or not or whether he was reliable, I
would give them my opinion.
Q Your opinion was that he was reliable?
A I would think -- I don't recall him
telling me anything that I found to be -- not to
be true. And I don't remember anything right now
that he has told me except that I don't -- based
on my gut feeling concerning what our
relationship was, I don't -- I never remember him
having told me anything that I found later not to
be true.
Q All right, Some people you find are
pretty unreliable informants and --
A Yeah, and 80 -- and if that's the case
then if they -- if they -- generally you
disassociate yourself with them one way or the
other because otherwise {t's a waste of time.
Q Right. They're not providing
information that really helps you get to the
bottom of things. You know, Mr. Evans testified
in this case eventually and talked about -- were
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you present at that trial? Were you called as a
witness, do you remember?
A No.
Q Okay. Mr. Evans also testified in
state habeas corpus proceedings. Did you attend
that proceedings?
A No.
Q During that proceeding Mr. Evans spoke
about conversations that he had had with you at
the time that the investigation was going on.
And he mentioned a particular conversation, let
me refer you to it, Page 122 of the State habeas
corpus transcript. I know you said you weren't
here and so you didn't have this information.
Let me show you what Mr. Evans said.
If you could read just that into the
record from Mr. Stroup starts asking.
M8. WESTMORELAND: Your Honor, for
the record purposes at this time I would
object to any intent to reopen any Giglio
issue that might be involved.
THE COURT: You're giving it to him
to refresh his recollection --
MS. WESTMORELAND: If that's the
purpose of it I don't have an objection,
but I do object to reopening the Giglio
claim.
THE COURT: I would obviously sustain
that objection but beyond that it's
unnecessary for him to read it into the
record to refresh his recollection.
MR, BOGER: Well, Your Honor, of
course our position, and we respect Your
Honor's ruling on it, is the Giglio matter
could be reopened under normal use if the
kind of principles of newly developed
evidence is present.
THE COURT: I'm with you on that to
begin with and obviously was favorably
disposed and I have given that issue every
ounce of favorable consideration that I
can give you and I can't find any way you
can do it.
MR. BOGER: I understand Your Honor's
ruling but I do think this bears on
relationships that --
THE COURT: Because it is an instance
of Office Evans testifying that he talked
with Dorsey 1 think he ought to be able to
look at it and see if that refreshes his
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recollection as to any conversation.
MR. BOGER: That's my purpose, Your
Honor.
TBE COURT: To that extent you
certainly may show it to him and he can
read it and state whether his recollection
is refreshed.
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Do you recall that conversation?
A No, 1 éon't.,
Q Do you have any reason to doubt the
conversation took place that Mr, Evans testified
under oath at the trial that he had had a meeting
with you at which a discussion of that sort took
place?
A I do not recall this meeting nor do I
-- nor can I understand why I would make him such
a promise.
Q But you don't have any recollection of
it at this time is what you're saying?
A No, I don't.
Q okay. If Mr. Evans of course was
testifying at that point back in 1981 we're here
six years later in 1987. Your testimony is, I
take it from what you previously said, that it's
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possible that you did meet with Mr. Evans on some
occasion during the investigation of this case.
A Yes, this is very possible.
Q And that it in that sense remembrance
of Mr. Evans could reflect that meeting that you
had with him at that time?
A It could be.
Q Okay. Do you -- you also testified, I
believe, that you don't recall meeting Mr. Evans
at any time at the jail, because I had said on
July the 12th at the jail.
Did you meet with him anywhere, at the
Atlanta Bureau of Police Services offices or the
Fulton County Courthouse?
A 1 == nO, 1 don't recall, Am I assuming
he was in custody?
Q Either in custody on the street in the
spring or the summer of 1978?
A No, I don't remember ever meeting him
out. I think the only time I remember seeing
Offie Evans outside of being in custody was at a.
woman's house, I think, somewhere around Mount
Zion Road or Poole Creek area, That's the only
time I ever remember seeing him out. I think
every other time I've ever heard mention of OQOffie
Evans he's always been in custody someplace.
Q Let me ask you one question about
procedure, and I simply don't know the answer to
this. When you go to see an inmate say of the
jail, Fulton County Jail, you're a police
officer, do you have to sign in and sign out?
A Yes.
Q 50 you make a contemporary record at
that point.
A That's correct.
Q So If we were able to obtain those
records it would conceivably, as you indicated
earlier, help refresh your recollection about
when you had spoken with somebody.
A Yeah.
0] Do you have to write the name of the
inmate at that time or do you simply write
Officer --
A No, I think we have to write the name
of the party that we're to visit,
Q Okay. . Does {t ever happen that you go
to visit one person and you wind up, because you
know several people in the jail, kind of walking
from cell to cell?
A I think it's happened. I think I've
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been upstairs and asked the deputy {f he would
get some other guy. So I seem to remember having
done that before.
Q Okay. Instead of going three or floors
back --
A Rather than come right on back
downstairs I stay up and ask them to let me see
someone else,
MR. BOGER: Excuse me one second,
Judge.
(Whereupon, a discussion ensued off
the record.)
THE COURT: Let me ask you: At any
time did you ever -- let me give you
context. One of the notes I seen which
isn't in evidence, somebody characterized
Offie Evans as being a professional snitch
and from what you've testified I gather
ou thought of him normally that he usually
was informing when he was in trouble, from
what you've. told me.
Did there come a time when you dia
anything, directly or indirectly, to prompt
him to obtain evidence from McCleskey while
they were in jail?
TBE
THE
WITNESS: NO, Sir. -
COURT: Know of anything like that
being done?
THE WITNESS: I don't know of anything
of my own personal knowledge, of anything.
THE
anything
THE
THE
BY MR. BOGER:
Q Let
testimony has
COURT Have you ever heard of
like that --
WITNESS: No, sir.
COURT: -=- In this case?
me follow up on that, though. Your
also been you don't even remember
meeting with Offie Evans during this period at
all?
A No.
Q Okay. Even though {t may well have
been that you did 80 because there are the
documents that reflect that?
A Yes,
MR. BOGER: I don't have any further
questions of the witness.
THE COURT: Do you have anything,
Mary Beth?
MS. WESTMORELAND: Just one moment,
Your Honor.
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I don't have any questions, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: All right. You're excused.
THE WITNESS: Thank you.
(Whereupon, the witness was excused
from the witness stand.)
THE COURT: Call your next witness.
MR. BOGER: Russell Parker, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: In view of all the bloody-
shirt rhetoric that's been associated with
this Court, I feel obliged to Observe that
the three investigating officers are all
black.
MR. BOGER: I think most of our
evidence went to patterns of discrimina-
tion.
THE COURT: I don't know what your
evidence was but I have certainly been
inundated by letters from People who are
being stirred up by somebody. I have read
an awful lot of the media coverage and an
awful of legal literature without going
any further, And any semblance between
what I heard in court and what has come in
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