http://www.freep.com/article/20110328/NEWS02/110328018/Former-drug-prosecutor-Karen-Plants-begins-jail-sentence-perjury-case?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|FRONTPAGE
Former drug prosecutor Karen Plants begins jail sentence in perjury case
9:39 AM, Mar. 28, 2011
BY JOE SWICKARD
DETROIT FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Once Wayne County's top drug prosecutor and now an admitted felon, Karen Plants left the Frank Murphy Hall of Justice this morning to begin serving a six-month sentence for engineering lies under oath to leverage a conviction in her biggest cocaine case and to cover up the star witness' secret role as a paid informant.
Assistant Attorney General William Rollstin said, "Ms. Plants was the hub of the wheel of the perjury."
He said there was fault to be found elsewhere, but “she was the one gatekeeper" who could have stopped the lies.
He also said trying to hide the witness’ real role was "a fool's errand from the very beginning."
Plants, 48, was head of the Wayne County Prosecutor's major drug unit in 2005 when Inkster narcotics cops made a 47-kilo cocaine bust using Chad Povish as their informant. Before the case, Povish was a small-scale snitch, but, as he later testified, he hoped to get $100,000 for setting up the bust of Alex Aceval and Ricardo Pena.
In court, however, Povish was presented as some hapless sap who'd been tricked into driving the load of drugs when the cops swept down. One of the cops, Scott Rechtzigel, would later testify he didn't know Povish until after the arrest.
After that testimony, Plants went to the trial judge, Mary Waterstone, and in a secret meeting told her of the perjury. The meeting and the perjury were kept from the jury.
The perjury came to light when transcripts of secret meetings were found during Aceval's appeal.
Rechtzigel, who started a 90-day misdemeanor sentence last week in a plea deal, said he lied to protect Povish from retaliation by Mexican drug cartels. The other cop, Robert McArthur, also accepted a misdemeanor plea and will be formally sentenced in May.
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