Wrongly Accused Student Commits Suicide
by TChris
Chuck Plinton killed himself after he was kicked out of the University of Akron for drug dealing. The case was built on the word of a paid informant and on a police officer's belated claim that Plinton had provided an unrecorded confession. Plinton's tragic story illustrates the danger of relying on paid snitches.
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.
The police paid Harris $50 for every drug buy he claimed to make. He told the police he'd purchased from Plinton twice, but Plinton's work records at the University showed that he was signed in at his job on the other side of the campus when the buys allegedly occurred.
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.
Here's an explanation: the cop made it up. That explanation must have made sense to the jury, which acquitted Plinton after only 40 minutes of deliberation.
Shockingly, the verdict (and the facts upon which it was based) failed to persaude the university's disciplinary board, which voted 3-2 not to reinstate Plinton. Why? They believed the snitch.
Plinton spent the next year trying to rebuild his life before deciding to end it.
"He was devastated," his father told me. "He couldn't afford more lawyers to fight the school." ...
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," [university president] Prozenza said in his statement yesterday.
Too bad Chuck Plinton didn't live to see that.
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