A French national who became ensnared in a sensational cocaine investigation in South Carolina said in an interview with Main Justice that federal authorities wrongly suspected him of spying.
Pascal Etcheber, 47, spent six months in jail while facing charges for lying to the FBI and Immigration and Customs Enforcement about his knowledge of drug use in Charleston involving former South Carolina Treasurer Thomas Ravenel, whose June 2007 indictment on federal cocaine charges dominated newspaper headlines in the state.
A globetrotting management consultant and author, Etcheber’s Wikipedia page says he believes “human beings can never find fulfillment because Freedom is lost by the obedience to laws.” In May, he pleaded guilty in federal court in Charleston to one count of marijuana possession and was sentenced to three years’ probation and a $1,000 fine.
Etcheber returned to France, but told Main Justice by telephone that he was recently barred from re-entering the United States to visit his young daughter who lives there. He said it was mistake, which he expects U.S. authorities to correct.
FBI Special Agent David Espie, who worked on the Ravenel case, became convinced along the way that he was a spy, Etcheber said.
“He spent three years chasing me, inventing coincidences,” said Etcheber, who denied he is a French secret agent.
Espie retired from the FBI last year. Main Justice was unable to reach him at telephone number listed as his residence. Thomas O’Neill, chief division counsel for the FBI in Columbia, S.C., declined to comment.

Pascal Etcheber (Provided)
Etcheber’s case underlined several issues about defendants’ rights.
The French national testified in a federal court hearing that agents tricked him in 2007 into speaking with them, violating Miranda rights he said he didn’t know he possessed. Moreover, the interview wasn’t recorded, with agents relying on handwritten notes that a federal judge described as “skimpy” to charge Etcheber with lying. And Etcheber has never been allowed to review a sealed court file in which the national security concerns about him were described.
Etcheber lived in Charleston off and on from 2004 to 2010, moving in elite circles when he wasn’t crisscrossing globe as a management consultant. One of his acquaintances was Ravenel, the onetime state official and son of former South Carolina U.S. Rep. Arthur Ravenel (R).
It was big news in Charleston when Ravenel was arrested in 2007 and quickly resigned as treasurer. In March 2008, Ravenel was sentenced to 10 months in prison on federal cocaine charges. By that time, federal agents already had Etcheber in their sights.
An ICE agent named Brian Sherota had asked Etcheber in the fall of 2007 to come to his office to discuss an immigration issue, according to testimony last year from Etcheber and government agents before U.S. District Judge Joseph Anderson in Charleston. Etcheber said he was surprised to be greeted by Espie and another FBI agent along with Sherota. The French national said in court the agents ambushed him with questions about cocaine use in Charleston and whether he secretly worked for French intelligence.
“I was very surprised by this spying accusation, and I really felt they were ridiculous, to be honest,” Etcheber said, according to a transcript. “But I was concerned because I have a daughter in the U.S., and I was concerned that these people have the power over me, that they could ask me to leave the country and never come back and I [would] lose my daughter. I’m already in a custody fight for my daughter.”
Etcheber said in court that he thought throughout the 2007 interview that Espie was with the National Security Agency, not the FBI. Espie testified that he’d only mentioned to Etcheber that he’d once worked at the NSA.
Then, instead of recording the interview, the agents took hand-written notes that formed the basis of a 302 report summary of Etcheber’s statements. A federal judge described the notes as “very cryptic … very skimpy, not full sentences by any means” and, in part because of their vagueness, found the notes did not contradict the 302 statements summaries that had been used to charge Etcheber. The Justice Department has been reviewing whether to change the FBI policy of not recording interviews.
Espie said at the court hearing last year that while he did not read Etcheber his Miranda rights, the Frenchman was advised that his cooperation was voluntary. But Etcheber testified he didn’t have that impression.
“I could not believe that I could just say, ‘Wait a minute, Mr. NSA, Mr. FBI, Mr. ICE, I’m not happy here, let’s cancel all this,” Etcheber said in court. He added that the agents made copies of his passport and asked why he traveled to places like Taiwan and Jerusalem.
The French national was initially charged with lying to federal agents during the 2007 interview. Later he faced additional charges, including lying to a federal judge, intimidating a witness, drug distribution and marijuana possession.
He pleaded guilty to marijuana possession in May in exchange for the dismissal of the other charges. Etcheber has since told Main Justice that he did not smoke marijuana but rather a cook at a party he held at his house several years ago used the drug without his consent or prior knowledge.
But Etcheber never faced a charge relating to national security matters. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Moore, who led the prosecution, said in court in February that national security issues involving Etcheber were not related to the charges in the case.
“There’s other information about Mr. Etcheber and national security that has been developed … but I’m not at liberty to talk about it in open court,” Moore said in court in February, according to a transcript.
Moore told Main Justice he could neither confirm nor deny any past or present investigation into espionage allegations against the French national.
Transcripts from the court hearings are embedded below.
Three major candidates have emerged for the no. 2 position at the Drug Enforcement Administration, the website Tickle The Wire reported.
The main contenders for Deputy Administrator include Thomas M. Harrigan, the DEA’s chief of operations; Anthony Placido, chief of intelligence; and John P. Gilbride, who is in charge of the New York office of the DEA.
The post was previously held by Michele Leonhart, who was nominated in February by President Barack Obama to head the agency. Leonhart has served as acting Administrator since 2007 when Karen Tandy stepped down.
Harrigan joined the agency in 1987 and became chief of operations in 2008. Placido began his career with the DEA in 1979 and moved to the chief of operations post in 2005. Gilbride joined the agency in 1981 and has headed the New York office in 2005 after a stint as head of the Detroit office.
William Saxbe, who served as Attorney General from 1974 to 1975 under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, has died.

William B. Saxbe (Wikimedia)
Saxbe, 94, died at his home in Mechanicsburg, Ohio, on Tuesday after a lengthy illness, according to the Associated Press.
Saxbe served as a Republican from Ohio in the U.S. Senate from 1969 until he was selected as Attorney General in December 1973.
He was the fourth Attorney General to serve in the Nixon administration, taking office after Elliot Richardson resigned in protest when Nixon ordered him to fire special prosecutor Archibald Cox, who was investigating the Watergate break-in. (Cox was later fired by acting Attorney General Robert Bork.)
Saxbe, a tobacco-chewing, occasionally outspoken maverick , who criticized Nixon over the bombing of North Vietnam, sought to restore a semblance of routine at a department gripped by crisis and demoralized by subsequent revelations of serious misconduct at agencies like the FBI.
As an institution, DOJ had been deeply shaken by the involvement of Attorney General John Mitchell, who was later convicted of Watergate-related crimes. The initial tremors were just the beginning. DOJ was jolted further by the aftershocks caused by the departure of Richardson and other top Justice officials in the Saturday Night Massacre of October 1973.
Still, Saxbe had a cordial relationship with Nixon until his resignation in 1974, according to most accounts of the period. Even so, Saxbe was later quoted as saying that Nixon had ruined the Republican Party and that he could not forgive Nixon for lying to the country.
As Attorney General, Saxbe’s was known for his gaffes, like referring to newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst as a “common criminal” when she took part in a bank robbery after she was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army in 1974, but before she had been charged with a crime.
Saxbe was given credit for approving an important 1974 antitrust lawsuit that eventually broke up the powerful American Telephone and Telegraph Company. When Gerald Ford became President, Saxbe stayed on as Attorney General before departing in 1975, when he was appointed ambassador to India. He served until 1977, before returning to his hometown, Mechanicsburg, to go into private legal practice.
Saxbe was said by associates to have restored order at DOJ, but it was his successor, Edward H. Levi, who served in the post from 1975 to 1977, who won wide praise for instituting the sweeping post-Watergate reforms at the Justice Department, including stricter operating controls on the FBI and closer scrutiny of the professional conduct of prosecutors .
This post has been updated since it was originally published.







