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Elmer Smith | The informant, the lies, the injustice -and a life lost
Philadelphia Daily News ^ | Mar. 24, 2006

Posted on 03/28/2006 7:30:09 AM PST by JTN

CHARLES PLINTON was still struggling with the reality of his son's suicide when he found the box of cartridges. Three were missing.

"There were people who wondered if someone else had shot Chuck," Plinton told me. "But I never really thought that. He had bought the gun the same day."

That day was Dec. 12, 2005. Charles A. "Chuck" Plinton Jr. called his mother, Frances Parker Robinson, from his car on the Pennsylvania Turnpike. He told her he was going to kill himself and that there was nothing she could do to stop him.

She begged him to pray about it. He said he had. She asked him to call his father. He refused.

"Please let me look at you one more time," she reportedly told him.

She called her former husband to tell him about their son's distress call. Then they waited.

"She called me back later that night," Plinton recalled. "She said, 'He did it. He did it.' "

There are no easy answers when a man in his mid-20s, with a college degree and a promising future, decides to take his own life.

"He couldn't keep up," his dad said. "He could not pay the rent, his car payment. He had legal bills.

"It was just too much for him. Everything went downhill for him after what happened to him at the University of Akron. He never got over it."

What happened to Chuck Plinton was a massive injustice that the University of Akron is just now trying to resolve, six months after his death.

Luis M. Prozenza, president of the university, in a statement issued yesterday said he is "calling for a thorough assessment of university regulations governing the student disciplinary process."

A year earlier, a "thorough assessment" may have saved Chuck Plinton's life.

Instead, the university took the word of a paid informant in one of the shakiest minor drug cases that ever came before a jury. They suspended him, took away the tuition waiver and stipend he was living on and he was banned from the dorms for life.

Plinton, who lived alternately with his mother in South Jersey and his father in Norristown, was accepted into Akron's Masters in Public Administration program after graduating from Lincoln University in Chester County. His father and uncle were also Lincoln alums.

He was in his second semester at Akron when he was arrested and charged with selling marijuana to a paid informant who had been planted in his dormitory.

The informant, Richard Dale Harris, 35, was a career criminal and a paid operative of the Summit County Police Department. Among the long list of people he had fingered was his own sister. He claims he ratted on her to save her children from her.

He was paid $50 for every drug buy he made on campus. The buys he claimed to have made on March 3 and March ll, 2003, from Plinton, totaled less than $100.

But work sheets showed that Plinton was signed in at his job across campus at the time of the alleged March 3 drug buy, according to the court record.

Even the identification of Plinton based on the alleged March 11 buy was so shaky that the informant tried to confirm it with tapes from a dormitory surveillance camera. But that showed Plinton dressed differently from the man police said sold the drugs.

The case was falling apart until the detective who arrested Plinton suddenly recalled, three months after the arrest, that Plinton had confessed to him.

The detective couldn't explain why he didn't put the confession in writing or why he had failed to include it in his original police report.

A jury in Summit County took all of 40 minutes to acquit.

"There wasn't much debate," juror Jeannie Woodall told the Akron Beacon Journal."

An elated Plinton went before the university's disciplinary board, thinking his reinstatement was a formality. Instead, by a 3-2 vote, they decided that they believed the informant - and not the jury.

"He was devastated," his father told me. "He couldn't afford more lawyers to fight the school."

So he came home and spent a year trying to rebuild his life. Until last Dec. 12, when it all became too much for him.

His family has not decided what, if anything, to do from here.

"We've been told that we have no legal standing to sue," Charles Plinton said.

Meanwhile, the university has been rocked by student protests and forced to answer tough questions, particularly from elements of Akron's black community.

"We hold ourselves to the highest standards of fairness," Prozenza said in his statement yesterday.

Too bad Chuck Plinton didn't live to see that.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: donutwatch; libertarians; ohio; universityofakron; warondrugs; wod; wodlist
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Charles with his sister, Deborah, and brother, David, at Charles' graduation from Lincoln University.
1 posted on 03/28/2006 7:30:14 AM PST by JTN
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To: freepatriot32; Wolfie; Supernatural

Ping


2 posted on 03/28/2006 7:30:49 AM PST by JTN ("I came here to kick ass and chew bubble gum. And I'm all out of bubble gum.")
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To: JTN; PaxMacian; WindMinstrel; philman_36; headsonpikes; cryptical; vikzilla; Quick1; gdani; ...

Hey, you know how it goes. Gotta break a few eggs and all that...


3 posted on 03/28/2006 7:34:15 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: JTN

This pisses me off SOOO MUCH!!!! This kid had it all.


4 posted on 03/28/2006 7:34:34 AM PST by mpackard
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To: Wolfie
Wow. Just plain wow. There's got to be a special room in Hell for this type of police informant.
5 posted on 03/28/2006 7:40:27 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: Hemingway's Ghost

and the detective too.

The detective couldn't explain why he didn't put the confession in writing or why he had failed to include it in his original police report.


6 posted on 03/28/2006 7:56:42 AM PST by PaxMacian
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To: PaxMacian
and the detective too.

That person deserves a room even deeper in Hell: he's supposed to be on the side of truth or justice. An informer is just a criminal who works for the cops---i.e., still a criminal.

7 posted on 03/28/2006 7:59:36 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: Hemingway's Ghost; JTN; Wolfie; mpackard; Mojave; robertpaulsen
Hey, you know how it goes. Gotta break a few eggs and all that...
3 Wolfie

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


This pisses me off SOOO MUCH!!!! This kid had it all.
4 mpackard

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Wow. Just plain wow. There's got to be a special room in Hell for this type of police informant.
5 Hemingway's Ghost


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Maybe our two government apologists can give us the informants/police POV on why this type of 'action' is necessary.
8 posted on 03/28/2006 8:00:29 AM PST by tpaine
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To: JTN
The ghost of Pavlik Morozov strikes again.

Never mind the Patriot Act: the Insane War on Some Drugs has done far more damage to our freedoms.

9 posted on 03/28/2006 8:00:50 AM PST by bassmaner (Let's take the word "liberal" back from the commies!!)
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To: Hemingway's Ghost

and the university's disciplinary board

"by a 3-2 vote, they decided that they believed the informant - and not the jury."

Personally, I would have sent the three to their reservations before embarking myself. Wasn't this double jeopardy? Is this not a violation of the 5th amendment to the Constitution? Shouldn't this board be held responsible for the violations of this student's rights?


10 posted on 03/28/2006 8:05:30 AM PST by PaxMacian
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To: bassmaner
"Never mind the Patriot Act: the Insane War on Some Drugs has done far more damage to our freedoms."

You're talking "in general", of course. Not this case.

11 posted on 03/28/2006 8:11:15 AM PST by robertpaulsen
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To: PaxMacian

It's appalling to think a university's disciplinary board would ignore the findings of a jury in a criminal case is beyond absurd.


12 posted on 03/28/2006 8:12:12 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: PaxMacian

Ah. You think that "not guilty" means "innocent".


13 posted on 03/28/2006 8:14:19 AM PST by robertpaulsen
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To: tpaine
"Maybe our two government apologists can give us the informants/police POV on why this type of 'action' is necessary."

What "action" is that? No action was taken by the government -- he was found not guilty. The system worked. What's your problem with the government (actually the Summit County Police Department? Dealing drugs is illegal in Ohio.

Are you referring to the action of the school? Take that up with the school. It their rules and regulations, not the government's.

14 posted on 03/28/2006 8:25:08 AM PST by robertpaulsen
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To: robertpaulsen
Maybe our two government apologists can give us the informants/police POV on why this type of 'action' is necessary.

What "action" is that? No action was taken by the government --

Weird comment bobbie. - As you yourself admit:

What's your problem with the government (actually the Summit County Police Department?

Here's the government 'action':

"-- Plinton ---- was in his second semester at Akron when he was arrested and charged with selling marijuana to a paid informant who had been planted in his dormitory.
The informant, Richard Dale Harris, 35, was a career criminal and a paid operative of the Summit County Police Department. --"

Read much bob?
[-- Actually, we all know you can read, but it's amazing/amusing to see you deny 'police state' reality.]

15 posted on 03/28/2006 8:45:32 AM PST by tpaine
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To: JTN

I've been through worse with the "proper authorities" several times and not over drugs.

I currently have one lawsuit filed against the state in state court and I will have another lawsuit filed in federal court soon.

That's just the recent stuff.

And I have felt like jumping off of a bridge many times.

But I'm still here and things are getting better for me.

My attorney told me, "The tide has turned in your favor at last".

But I always knew it would. It was only a question of time.

I asked a friend this past February what he would do if he was me.

He said, "If I were you I would have put a gun to my head a year ago and pulled the trigger. I can't believe how strong you are".

By the Grace of God...

I feel so bad for this young man and his family. If he could have held out a little longer, the tide may have changed for him too.


16 posted on 03/28/2006 9:08:48 AM PST by Supernatural
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To: JTN
"We've been told that we have no legal standing to sue," Charles Plinton said.

Oh, really? I would say "find a better lawyer".

17 posted on 03/28/2006 9:12:31 AM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: robertpaulsen

"Ah. You think that "not guilty" means "innocent"."

No, it means one is acquitted of the charges and
according to the fifth amendment shall not be "subject
for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy."


18 posted on 03/28/2006 9:21:40 AM PST by PaxMacian
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To: Wolfie
Gotta break a few eggs and all that...

Well, we know one thing about the vile public-teat-sucking creatures responsible for this tragedy - all that they do is for the children, so their hearts are in the right place.

Wasn't it Josie Wales who opined, "Buzzards have to eat, same as worms."

19 posted on 03/28/2006 9:32:20 AM PST by headsonpikes (Genocide is the highest sacrament of socialism.)
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To: robertpaulsen

But the school didn't give him a tuition waiver. The horror!


20 posted on 03/28/2006 6:20:01 PM PST by Mojave
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