special feature the Sunday doily by imark di ien A Number 44 Night Editor: Larry Lempert Sunday, February 21, 1971 TERRY BERNAY AND THE ARGUS Undercover narc: Get It began last September without at- tracting much attention. There was little reason to suspect the newcomer at first. His manner was certainly dif- ferent - they say now they should have recognized he didn't belong - but there was nothing conspicuous to give Terry away. After they realized what had happened, though, it would be too late. Two of their homes would be the subject of the drug raid and five of the group would be facing drug charges. * * * * CHRISTOPHER Switzenberger s a t ,back in the chair in his Detroit office. He has been a policeman for a long time, and for him there is a simple logic behind enforcing drug laws: "If the laws exist, they must be sience. If he and his partners do well, they can't expect to stay in a town more than a year. By then, they should have made contacts on the local drug market, "scored", served warrants and testified in court against their former benefactors. Then, their cover gone, they're off to another town. Terry was once a familiar figure in the Ann Arbor street community. Now he is gone, except for the court ap- pearances he'll make in March against Doug Connelley, Nine For- rester, Wilson Tanner, Michael Po- lich and Cheryl R a s c h. He has done his job well - five is quite a catch for one undercover agent work- ing alone. Drifting in with the yearly influx - the first time they had been "bust- ed." Most were runaways in some sense of the word. Doug, who the records say is 18, ran away from home in Chelsea, Mich. six years ago and even- tually settled in Ann Arbor. Leslie said she was from the East and about the same age as Doug. She was un- happy at home and found it hard to stay in any one place very long, so periodically she would pick up and seek another community. Like t h e others, she would occasionally hear from her parents - perhaps some money would come to help see her through a difficult time - but except for the others in the collective, she was alone. Though most of the group w e r e ting 'thE Following his usual procedure, Ter- ry saved up h i s information while sending the evidence to Lansing, un- til he had "scored" as many times as he thought possible, and, after con- sultation with Ann Arbor Police De- tective Richard Anderson, secured the warrants on the morning of Jan. 19. It had been getting rather difficult for Terry among the people around the Argus house. He would only come t buy, where etiquette demanded he al- so sample. Several of Terry's ac- quaintances at the house say t h a t during his visits he would often smoke marijuana with them and would sometimes sell drugs he had to others. State police say this is impossible; that any undercover agent would be fired if he sold or sampled the drugs he acquired. T h e y say during the times he is accused of smoking mari- juana, he was probably just "faking it." * * * *~ T CAME quickly. Two cars and a van broug;ht 15 police officers to 1023 Church St. There were three uniform- ed Ann Arbor patrolmen, eight plain- clothes detectives and four troopers from the Michigan State Police (in- cluding Terry). The same procedure was followed at both houses: Terry would ask to speak to one of the five people mentioned in t h e warrants. After entering, Terry would feign an- other attempted purchase from the persons named so he could find out if they were present. At the Church St. house, witnesses say it happened this way: From about 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. that day, police were present at their house. Terry asked for Sophie, who he knew lived there. After entering, he went up to the second floor where her room was. It wasn't really a com- mune at 1023 Church, but there was only one student among the people who lived there off-and-on. Like the soon-to-be visited residents of the Ar- gus house, they were young and afraid. When the police followed Ter- ry in after he radioed the party from the upstairs bathroom, the six people present were not alarmed when the front door was banged open loudly. As one resident put it, "we liked to have fun a n d it was usually noisy around here." After the police left with their six suspects for t h e Argus house, 1023 Church was a mess. Clothes and furn- ishings were strewn about in the same way they would be found later at the Argus after the raid there. Those ar- rested would claim the disorder was wrought by the police. They said the police had no right to search their homes and consiscate materials with- out search warrants. The police and the mayor would say they had done nothing beyond the bounds of the law. But that wasn't really the story.be- hind what happened. Of the 15 peo- ple arrested during that two-day per- iod, ten would be set free. The mater- ials confiscated w o u 1 d be returned, big the penalty for possessionc juana from a felony to a mis or? "Just coincidence," said Ch ny after the raid. But the fe pressed by some conservative liberalized marijuana 1 a w brought pressure for a "cra Republican candidates f oi Robert Harris' job were stro vocating tighter reins on d The mayor was not notifie raid until after it had taken The day after the arrests, ple were arraigned. Michael name by which Michael Po pushers' of maxi- FOR THOSE arrested that day, the ;demean- memory fades slowly. The open talk of paranoia gets translated into ief Kras- more precautions lest a n e w Terry eling ex- makes his way into the community. s against Somber looks greet suspicious visitors vs h a d while a new battle faces the Argus clsdown." collective. r Mayor Taxes on the house, which they are )ngly ad- in the process of buying, have gone up drug use. sharply, and city inspectors threaten d of the action against them unless they can place. show that recent electrical work was done by an approved "official" con- five peo- tractor. Their wiring was done by a 1 P, (the friend. A -C licht was * # enforced and our job is to catch those who disobey." Switzerberger is a Lieutenant Detective with the Michi- gan State Police yet, like many others, seldom wears a uniform. The badge and a sheathed pistol are the o n 1 y things that set him off from others. The lieutenant doesn't use his own plain clothes disguise to full advant- age. As part of the nucleus of the Michigan State Police Intelligence Bureau, he directs other men in plainclothes. These are younger men, men with ambition. And long h a i r. And mod clothes. They are trained to catch the drug users by buying drugs from them - under laws that can put the sellers in prison for 20 years. Among the best at doing this is Trooper Terry Bernay. "One of our better agents," says the lieutenant. Terry has excelled in a specialty where success is measured by tran- of youth, it was easy for Terry to feign a background. By September of 1970, Terry, though new to narcotics work, would be well assimilated into the Ann Arbor community. Within. a month, he would start "scoring." "THAT'S REALLY bogue," the girl said, looking at her friend. He had pulled out a pipe, and after assuring the group standing around that it was only tobacco, he lit up. The nervous- ness was to be excused - they were standing just outside the Ann Arbor police station, waiting for friends that had been arrested on drug charges'. Every so often, 'a n o t h e r youth would come out the door, then, sensing freedom, he w o u 1 d run to greet his friends. They embrace, cry a bit and sputter excited fragments and queries about what had just hap- pened. For many of them it was new about the age to be graduating from high school, classroom education had lost whatever meaning it had once held for them. The Argus was their education now - an education they shared as their numbers changed with their traveling. Boston, San Francis- co, Chicago, New York, Detroit, Ann Arbor: all places where they could find others like them, places where there were friendly havens. Such a place was the Argus house, home of an underground newspaper and the six people of the collective that pub- lishes it. The homes surrounding the Argus house are old and dreary. Occasional- ly one or two will breathe their last and an Ann Arbor corporation will raise brick and concrete cubicles in place of the sagging frames. Students will live in these places - these mod- ern apartments - much as a visiting owner would; in one season, out the next. Flowing with the tide of their education while the counter-culture holds forth across at the Argus house. At times old and solemn, picturing themselves much like the revolution- aries that adorn their walls; at times the youthful model of perpetual nai- vete. Innocent enough to accept an awkward and ,obvious Terry Bernay into their midst, yet somberly noting later the failure was "a lapse" in their known) was thought to h a v e le'ft town. Unlike others who feared they were about to be served with war- rants, he stayed at a friend's house. The detectives came for him the same day. Bill Tanner was arrested outside the police station t h a t night while awaiting word about the others. Nina was arrested while standing outside the courtroom where her friends were being arraigned. "We were trying to help relations between the kids and police and then BACK INSIDE Michigan State Police headquarters in Detroit there is a recruiting poster prominently dis- played. Two grim figures f i 1 1 the bright blue uniforms. In t-h e fore- ground, the man has a white face. Standing behind him is a black one - but not too black - just g r e y enough so you know the force doesn't ; discriminate. The same features com- pose each figure and beneath them is the legend, "Men With a Future." Intelligence Sgt. Jim Mull enters Chris' office with photostat clippings of articles written about the Argus raid. L i k e the other "intelligence" agencies, they keep up-to-date files of all radical and underground news- papers, including the Argus. "The ar- ticles go right off mentioning o u r cars and their colors," complains Jim. "We'd rather not publicize the fact, that we h a v e undercover agents," Chris explains. Jim was angry. "That's a good way to get one of our guys killed." And one supposes he's right. There have been "narcs" killed lately in the line of duty exposing users and sellers of marijuana. And there have been users and sellers likewise murdered by heroin addicts searching for the answer to their need. But heroin is syndicate-run, Jim explains, so the FBI handles it. LATELY THERE h a v e been other drug raids carried out by the Ann Photos Iy Jim Jud(,ki~s "revolutionary organization" a n d locking their front door with boards bolted across its back. After raiding the Argus and another house con- taining other "community" members, Jan. 19, Ann Arbor Police Chief Wal- ter Krasny said he was convinced he had arrested "the big pushers." SIDE FROM Terry's preparation, s' , .. .. x f; w: