From: Mark Keesee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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Jurors take weekend off from lawsuit by 2 lawmen

BY LINDA SATTER
ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

A federal jury will resume deliberations Monday on
whether a 1996 film about the mysterious 1987 deaths of
two boys on Saline County railroad tracks defamed two
law enforcement officers.
    The 60-minute film, Obstruction of Justice: the Mena
Connection, produced by Patrick Matrisciana of Hemet,
Calif., states near the end, orally and in writing, that
eyewitnesses implicated six law enforcement officers in
killing the boys and covering it up.
    It then names those officers. Among them are Jay
Campbell and Kirk Lane, who worked as Pulaski County
sheriff�s office drug detectives at the time of the
boys� deaths and are now sheriff�s office lieutenants.
    Campbell and Lane filed a lawsuit in 1997 against
Matrisciana, who does business under the names Citizens
for an Honest Government, Integrity Films and Jeremiah
Films, and whose other films have included The Clinton
Chronicles.
    The deputies contend that in his quest to make money
off right-wing conspiracy theories involving President
Clinton as he sought reelection, Matrisciana made the
video, which he called a documentary, on the basis of
mere speculation and unfounded allegations.
    Testimony in a week-long federal trial in Little
Rock before a visiting judge, U.S. District Judge Warren
K. Urbom of Lincoln, Neb., ended Friday afternoon, and
jurors deliberated about 3 hours before deciding to rest
for the weekend.
    Before adjourning for the day, they asked for a copy
of the First Amendment and asked to watch the video
again. Urbom told them to adhere to jury instructions on
their First Amendment questions, but he gave them the
videotape.
    Matrisciana�s defense has centered on his First
Amendment rights to freedom of expression and his
reliance on others who diligently researched the matter.

    Those others are primarily Linda Ives, mother of one
of the slain boys and a crusader for 12 years to expose
those she thinks are responsible, and Jean Duffey, who
headed a drug task force in Saline County until moving
to Texas in 1991 amid unproven accusations of
impropriety leveled by Dan Harmon when he was
prosecuting attorney.
    The women testified that they believed then, and
still believe, that the words in the video are true.
They believe that the boys, Ives and Don Henry, 16, were
walking along the tracks about 4 a.m. Aug. 23, 1987,
when they came upon a small plane dropping a cargo of
illegal drugs as it flew without lights about 100 feet
off the ground.
    Speculation is that the plane was flying to the Polk
County town of Mena but couldn�t land with drugs on
board.
    Linda Ives believes the boys� inadvertent
interruption of a clandestine operation was seen by
someone waiting to pick up the drugs, and that the boys,
knowing they�d been spotted, ran toward a pay telephone
to call for help.
    A man who had stopped by the nearby Ranchette
grocery store in Alexander after drinking in a bar later
reported that he saw the boys head for the phone, but
two men grabbed them, beat them and stuffed them into a
patrol car, where another officer waited.
    Ives believes the boys were killed or at least
rendered unconscious before their bodies were placed on
the tracks, where a train ran over them.
    Taking advantage of the two men�s description, which
could have fit Campbell and Lane, Harmon subpoenaed the
two officers to appear before a 1988 grand jury
investigating the deaths, the officers contend. But
first, they say, he spread the word that �the killers�
were about to testify.
    Campbell and Lane contend that Harmon, now in prison
on federal racketeering and drug charges, was simply
trying to save himself. Though the public didn�t know it
at the time, the two drug officers were investigating
allegations against Harmon. They contend he found that
out and sought to pre-empt them and destroy their
credibility, thus ending their investigation.
    Though Ives and Duffey said this week that the grew
to disbelieve Harmon before they helped make the video,
they insisted they got further corroboration of the
�Campbell and Lane scenario� from John Brown.
    Brown, a private investigator who had looked into
the case as a Saline County detective and appears
throughout the film, denied this week that he ever
identified Campbell and Lane as the killers. In fact,
Brown said, he warned Matrisciana against putting the
men�s names in the video.
    But Matrisciana and the women contended that Brown
had some say-so over the final product and didn�t
disagree then. Brown also bought 300 copies of the
video, defense attorney John Wesley Hall Jr. noted.
    Plaintiffs� attorney Jim Rhodes brought out Friday,
during Duffey�s cross-examination, that a second man who
had reported being at the grocery store that night, whom
Duffey cited as a corroborating eyewitness, had himself
been arrested by Campbell and Lane.
    Duffey acknowledged that she didn�t know about that
arrest � and thus the man�s possible motive to invent
his �eyewitness account� -- when she helped write the
video�s narrative.
    But she, too, contends that Harmon sought to tarnish
her reputation because her officers were learning
incriminating information about him. She testified this
week that Harmon falsely accused her of stealing
task-force money and wanted to jail her, to thwart her
work, but she got a tip that she would be killed in
jail, so she became a fugitive by moving to Texas.
    Mentioning several police agencies' failure to solve
the murder case, Rhodes asked Duffey if she thought that
�any and everybody who has failed to solve this mystery
is involved in a mass cover-up or conspiracy to protect
Jay Campbell and Kirk Lane.�
    �I don�t use the word �conspiracy, � but to the rest
of your statement, absolutely,� she replied.
    Of at least seven investigations by agencies with
access to scientific analysis, �none of them have agreed
with your beliefs, have they?� Rhodes asked.
    Duffey replied that they �amazingly� had not -- at
least, publicly.
    Rhodes then named at least five other scenarios that
have circulated about how the boys may have been killed,
suggesting that she and Ives simply developed
tunnel-vision on the Campbell and Lane theory.
    Rhodes suggested that perhaps Duffey and Ives didn�t
so much really believe that the two officers killed the
boys but that a videotape editor, David Manasian, added
the names to the video as an afterthought, and the two
women recklessly allowed the inclusion.
    �The bottom line,� Rhodes told jurors in closing
arguments, �is there was absolutely no evidence to
support what�s in this statement� in the video. He told
jurors that �if you don�t find this defamatory, we�re
putting our stamp of approval on the right to say
anything at any time about anybody, whether it�s
corroborated or not.�
    Hall argued that even if the statement is wrong, it
wasn�t made recklessly and �the truth doesn�t really
matter if you can get the question out in the open and
bring about free debate. ... The public decides what the
truth is.�
    He also noted that �Linda Ives has every possible
motive to get the right person� and therefore wouldn�t
name someone she didn�t truly suspect.

Copyright � 1999, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. All
rights reserved.

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