Drug suspects had soap, not cocaine bricks. Pair spent month in prison before lab results came back.

The Morning Call – by Manuel Gamiz Jr.

When a state trooper pulled the couple over along Interstate 78 last month, he said he stopped them because they were going 5 miles over the speed limit and hugging the side of the lane.

The trooper said he smelled marijuana. The driver of the new Mercedes-Benz, 26-year-old Annadel Cruz, told him she had smoked the drug before she left New York City, but had not done so in the car.  

The trooper asked to search the car, and Cruz consented. When the trooper found two plastic-wrapped packages in the trunk of the car, Cruz told him they contained soap she had made herself.

The trooper field-tested them and Cruz and her friend, 30-year-old Alexander Bernstein, spent the next month in Lehigh County Prison after being arrested on cocaine-trafficking charges.

They got out this week after the Lehigh County district attorney’s office dropped the charges because a state police lab tested the packages and found they contained boric acid or soap.

Attorneys for the couple are questioning the investigation, accusing the trooper of profiling the couple and botching the field test.

“I think it is a nice car with out-of-state plates and a Hispanic female behind the wheel” that prompted the traffic stop, said Josh Karoly, who represents Bernstein. “If it was me driving that car, this wouldn’t have happened.”

Cruz’s attorney, Robert Goldman, said, “After this, everyone should pause about jumping to conclusions when a field test is said to be positive by law enforcement. There are people going to jail on high bail amounts based upon these field tests.”

Bernstein was sent to prison under $500,000 bail and Cruz under $250,000 bail by District Judge Jacob Hammond.

Field tests are used by police departments to test substances believed to be drugs at suspected crime scenes. A sample of the substance is mixed with a liquid, causing a reaction and change in color that will indicate if it is an illegal drug, Karoly said.

That substance will then be sent to the state police lab for further analysis and testing.

Karoly said he believes the field test either didn’t happen, it was lied about or something is wrong with how it was done.

“A young man spent a month in jail, spent a substantial amount of money to get out of jail and missed Thanksgiving with his 17-month-old son,” he said. “To do that on a field test, we better be darn sure that these field tests are accurate.”

Bernstein’s bail was posted Tuesday, a day before the district attorney’s office called to let him know they were dropping charges. Cruz, a community college student, was released from prison Wednesday, Goldman said. Goldman said Cruz had no criminal record before the Nov. 13 stop in South Whitehall Township.

While his client is happy to be released, Goldman said it will take time to recover from the stigma of being incarcerated as a drug offender.

“Her name is all over the place, making light of her defense that she was just transporting soap,” he said. “She was labeled online as a drug dealer, she was incarcerated with people who do commit crimes.

“It’s going to take her a good deal of time to get her good name back,” Goldman said.

According to a criminal complaint:

A state trooper stopped Cruz, who was driving a new Mercedes-Benz, on westbound I-78 near the Cedar Crest Boulevard exit because she was approaching 60 mph in a 55 mph zone and was riding a traffic line for about a half-mile.

When questioned, Cruz told the trooper the car was a rental and they were driving from New York to Florida. The trooper told her he smelled marijuana and she said she had smoked earlier in the day, but not in the car. She gave police permission to search the car.

Bernstein told police he had a bag in the trunk and gave police permission to search it. In the bag, the trooper found two brick-size packages, which were covered in clear plastic wrap and red tape.

Cruz told police the packages contained soap she had made, but a field test revealed that the substance was cocaine. The packages weighed 5.2 pounds. Police said they also found a small amount of marijuana in Cruz’s bra.

The couple were charged with possession with intent to deliver cocaine, possession of cocaine, conspiracy and possession of drug paraphernalia. Cruz also was charged with possession of a small amount of marijuana, disregarding traffic lanes and speeding.

The district attorney’s office would only confirm that the state police lab determined the substance found in the car turned out to be soap, leading to the charges being withdrawn Thursday.

Attempts to reach state police Friday were unsuccessful.

Both attorneys accused state police of profiling.

Goldman said police stopped his client for barely going past the speed limit and getting close to the line, something almost every driver on the highway does at some point.

“Anybody who drives under 60 miles an hour on I-78 has the chance of getting rear-ended,” Goldman said. “It was one of the worst probable causes for stopping.”

Goldman said his client was taking the soap to a sister in Florida. He described Bernstein as her friend.

Karoly said this case is an example of rushing to conclusions.

“We are so cynical that we don’t believe people,” Karoly said. “We don’t give people the benefit of the doubt.”

Neither attorney said he has discussed civil litigation.

manuel.gamiz@mcall.com

http://articles.mcall.com/2013-12-13/news/mc-state-police-arrest-cocaine-was-hand-soap-20131213_1_trooper-drug-suspects-soap

5 thoughts on “Drug suspects had soap, not cocaine bricks. Pair spent month in prison before lab results came back.

  1. I’ve been driving over twenty-seven years and have never been pulled over for going five miles an hour over the posted limit. Police will use any excuse to pull a motorist over in the hopes of searching the vehicle. Never confess anything to a cop and never consent to a search.

  2. First, was she in jail or prison – there is a big difference ya`ll know…. They were in jail for a month, 24 hr.s a day only to be released! Seems to me that the city or county – what ever – owes them at least minimum wage for 24 hr.s a day seven days a week and how about overtime for time served over 40 hr.s a week while in jail for 30 days. Not only that but how about punitive damages that they suffered while they were locked up, not to mention reputation issues. F. them law enforcement people, it is time they get prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law just like they do to the rest of us.

    1. you’re right, Digger. The lawsuits are important because draining some resources from the enemy is always helpful, and a few expensive lawsuits can induce them to alter their policies a bit.

  3. It’s funny how the trooper can “field test” the driver and lock them up for a month, but apparently the idiot couldn’t determine that the “cocaine” was actually soap.

    Obviously he’s just a sadistic bastard who thought it would be fun to ruin someone’s life. The article doesn’t say whether they lost their jobs after being locked up, or who took care of the kids and pets, or whether their house was burgled in their absence. Was their home foreclosed upon so pig-boy can have his fun?

    1. Hey J R
      I bet these thievin ass pigs were after a free mercedes under the unconstitutional “forfeiture scam ” policy,we are about 2 minutes away from just shooting these fkn highway men,unmentioned by any is the fact that a high number of speedometers are 3-7 mph off from the factory and can vary greatly by just changing the tire size,let alone the chickens%$t nature of cops exceeding the posted speed by many mph driving like fkn maniacs to steal money with the ticketing scam. as the other guys have stated once a thievin pig always a thievin pig ,never ever ever trust a pig no matter what sweet words they speak.their day of comeuppance is on the horizen.
      Steve

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