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Trial begins for Miss. mayor who destroyed duplex

Holbrook Mohr

Issue date: 2/10/09 Section: News
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Jackson, Miss. Mayor Frank Melton walks towards federal court in downtown Jackson, Miss., Monday, for the first day of his federal trial. Melton and his former police bodyguard Michael Recio are being tried for allegedly violating the civil rights of a duplex owner and tenant--by leading a group of young men to damage the home in 2006 with sticks and a sledgehammer.
Media Credit: Rogelio V. Solis - Associated Press
Jackson, Miss. Mayor Frank Melton walks towards federal court in downtown Jackson, Miss., Monday, for the first day of his federal trial. Melton and his former police bodyguard Michael Recio are being tried for allegedly violating the civil rights of a duplex owner and tenant--by leading a group of young men to damage the home in 2006 with sticks and a sledgehammer.

JACKSON, Miss. - The mayor of Mississippi's largest city led a "rampage of destruction" when he directed a group of young men to use sticks and sledgehammers to destroy a duplex he considered a crack house, a prosecutor said Monday.

Jackson Mayor Frank Melton, 59, is on trial in federal court for violating the civil rights of the duplex's owner and her tenant.

"This case is about government officials who took a sledgehammer to the Constitution just as surely as they took it to Bubba's house," federal prosecutor Patricia Sumner said during opening arguments, referring to tenant Evans Welch.

Melton, who has already been acquitted on state charges in the same incident, has claimed he was just keeping a campaign promise to root out crime in Mississippi's capital city. He has not denied damaging the home in August 2006.

He and former bodyguard Michael Recio face three felony charges and a maximum 25-year sentence. They have pleaded not guilty.

Melton's attorney, John Reeves, is withholding his opening arguments until after the government rests its case.

Recio's attorney, Cynthia Stewart, told jurors the government's case is built on the lies of Marcus Wright, another former bodyguard who took a plea deal and turned on the others.

"He's lied and he's lied and he's lied," Stewart said.

Stewart said Wright is the one who entered the home in a threatening manner, with his gun drawn, but now he is afraid of prison and will say anything to save himself. She said Wright entered a plea after federal prosecutors threatened him with more charges.

She also said the home's tenant needed help and told Melton to "tear the house down" because he was being victimized. Melton has argued in court papers that drug dealers were bullying the tenant and using the site for drug distribution.
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