THE Summer Daily Vol, LXXXIII, No. 50-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 28, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages Judge blasts prosecution's actions lammondon g uilty of extortion Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK John Ehrlichman is shown testifying before the Senate Watergate committee. The former assistant to the President disppted several points made by fired White House counsel John Dean in his fourth day of testimony. White House spies defended by Ehrllchman By DAVID STOLL Special To The Daily CADILLAC, Mi. - A Wexford County circuit judge yesterday found Rainbow People's Party mem- bers Pun Plamondon and Craig Bla- zier guilty of extortion by threat of accusation. However Judge William Peterson found the two men innocent of three other related charges and criticized the state of Michigan for going to too much trouble in prosecuting the pair. PLAMONDON and Blazier were cleared on charges of conspiracy to extort, extor- tion by threat of injury, and conspiracy to commit criminal usury in connection with an alleged attempt to collect $3000 in a Benzie County marijuana deal last January. The conviction carries a maximum 20 year sentence or $10,000 fine but Peterson said he would delay sentencing until Sep- tember. In the meantime Plamondon and Blazier are free on bond. The two men were originally arrested on charges stemming from their January visit to the home of confessed drug dealer Uwe Wagner in Benzie County. Police charged them with attempting forcefully extort $3000 that Wagner allegedly owed them in a marijuana transaction. PETERSON ruled that the defendants in fact "imposed their will upon that of Mr. Wagner and attempted to collect money from him", and that they threatened to expose Wagner, a German national, as a hard drug dealer in articles to be pub- lished in the Ann Arbor Sun. The judge called the extent of the pro- secution's efforts "foolish" and told Pla- mondon and Blazier, "an inordinate amount of time and expense has been spent on you." See PUN, Page S One deadin Oklahoma jail rebel ion McALESTER, Okla. (5T-Half of the inmates rioted at the state prison here yesterday taking a hostage and setting fires which raged unnampered throughout the prison, authorities said. At least one inmate was killed and 12 others were injured. Prison physician Dr. Rafael Cott said one inmate died of stab wounds he said were apparently inflicted' by other in- mates. He said three other inmates were in - critical condition. Two guards were stabbed during the takeover. THE REVOLT began in midafternoon when six armed inmates stabbed the two guards and took hostages, officials said. But by last night Gov. David Hall said "approximately 500 to 800 men comprise the prison rioters." About 900 other pris- oners returned at 8:30 p.m. to the only two cell blocks left untouched by the fires. Cott said he had treated 12 inmates for a variety of injuries during the day but had not been allowed to examine the hostages. One of the hostages, Deputy Warden Sam Johnston, telephoned Warden Park Anderson about an hour after being seized and said, "I'm all right. They're. treating me well." See ONE, Page S WASHINGTON (UPI)-John Ehrlichman yesterday defended the use of spying into the personal habits of politicians as long as members of Congress "totter onto the floor" in no condition to cast sober votes. In a long exchange with Sen. Lowell Weicker fR-Coon.) during his fourth day of cross-examination at the Senate Water- gate hearing, the former assistant to the President argued that the people's right to know whether public servants are com- petent overrides the seamy aspects of em- ploying undercover agents. Ehrlichman, a teetotaler, said "a kind of unwritten law" in the news profession keeps such news from voters, so it is legitimate for an incumbent politician's opponents to dig it up as best he can. He defended the long White House em- ployment of Anthony Ulasewicz, who tes- tified he looked into the Chappaquiddick affair involving Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and investigated the personal, sexual, moral and drinking habits of friends and opponents of the Nixon ad- ministration. Ulasewicz was paid with campaign funds. During the lunch break, Committee Chairman Sam Ervin (D-S.C.) and Vice Chairman Howard Baker (R-Tenn.) met with Fred Buzhardt and Leonard Gar- ment, White House counsels, on Ehrlich- man's refusal to testify Thursday on a project undertaken in 1971 by "the plum- bers" unit in the White House. Ehrlichman said it involved another nation and its disclosure would embarrass this govern- ment. Ervin said the discussions would be dis- closed "not by me between now and when Gabriel blows his last horn." Ehrlichman told the committee that President Nixon gave no hint on March 22 that he knew about a Watergate cover- up. John Dean has sworn that he told Nixon the day earlier that his admin- istration was involved in the cover-up and it threatened to become a "cancer on the presidency." Ehrlichman said he was forced to con- clude either that Dean had not told Nixon all the facts or the President had decided to feign ignorance in hopes of entrapping his associates to reveal their guilty knowledge. Dean has testified that on March 21 he decided to lay the full story of administra- See NIXON, Page 5 Pun Plamondon