Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jul 2000 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 2000 Roanoke Times Contact: 201 W. Campbell Ave., Roanoke, Va. 24010 Website: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/index.html Author: Zeke Barlow INDICTED POLICE OFFICER KNOWN IN NEIGHBORHOOD AS 'NICE GUY' 'He Was One Of The Few Cops Who Looked Out For You,' Said A Northwest Resident A federal grand jury indictment accuses Roanoke Police Officer Frederick Pledge of drug charges. Officer Frederick Pledge says that being a hands-on cop is the best way to work a beat. Talk to the people. Get to know them. His beat was one of the toughest around, working the streets of Northwest Roanoke, where the majority of the city's drug crimes occur and police respond to reports of gunshots almost nightly. Some who live in the neighborhood he once patrolled said he was a cop who got involved and cared. "I thank God for sending him to my community," said Martha Brown, a resident of the area. "I think he's truthful." But Brown wasn't saying this to help Pledge move through the ranks or to give him a pat on the back. She said it to help get Pledge out of jail. Monday, the man who said he wanted to be a cop since he was a kid found himself on the other side of the law. Pledge was arrested after a federal grand jury indictment said he used his position to push drugs, gave protection to drug dealers and had people beaten up for talking too much about his dealings. The indictment alleges 16 examples of Pledge taking drug and money bribes in support of a federal racketeering charge. It alleges nine acts, including that Pledge and other unidentified officers "shook down" and stole drugs from local dealers, in support of a separate conspiracy charge. Pledge has been on administrative leave since June. Two other officers who were friends of his recently were put on leave. The U.S. attorney's office has said more indictments are expected in August. Pledge, 29, posted bond and was released from jail Thursday with the help of Brown and 35 other people who wrote letters to the court asking that he be granted bond. Pledge's lawyer, Rickey Young, said his client is shocked by the charges. Pledge is a man who got into policing to help people and isn't a dirty cop, Young said. "It's crazy that he got into trouble because he was friendly to people," Young said. "This kid was actively involved" in the community he patrolled. Pledge told a reporter Thursday that he prides himself on not writing tons of tickets and arresting people like a "Robocop," but talking to those in the community. He said he was merely "community policing." "It was what I was taught in the academy," he said, referring to the training he got from the city when he joined the force in 1993. Young said that Pledge often talked with all members of the community, drug dealers and upstanding citizens alike. But because Pledge talked to the dealers, people think he is guilty just because he associated with them, Young said. "He made an attempt to help the crack users on Lafayette" Boulevard, said James Wise, who attends the same church as Pledge. "If you are trying to help someone, you can't be distant. You've got to be hands-on. He took a different approach and made an effort." The indictment says Pledge "engaged in social activities with drug dealers and other known criminals, to include using drugs, in order to strengthen his position with them." It also says he went to numerous striptease parties with dealers and once sold cocaine at a party. Police officers on the force are reluctant to talk about the case other than to say that Pledge seemed like a nice guy. But some former officers were willing to talk freely. Lylburn Ollie, who recently retired, said Pledge put forth a good, clean image. "His uniform looked like it was made for him," Ollie said. "He knew the job. I was as surprised as anybody to hear about it." Pledge said in the interview that he wanted to wear the uniform since he was a kid. He grew up in Brownsville, Tenn., a small town with family values, said a high school classmate, Levita Kent. She remembers Pledge as a suave guy who was a bit of a practical joker and a ladies' man. Pledge said he joined the Marine Corps after high school because of the rigid discipline it offered. He saw combat in Desert Storm and helped mop up after Hurricane Hugo, earning three awards before he was honorably discharged. After more than four years in the service, he joined the Roanoke Police Department in 1993, a time when it was aggressively recruiting minorities. He was assigned to the traffic division, where he often rode a motorcycle. In his off time, he was an avid motorcyclist, often cruising the streets with his bike club, the "Killer Bees." Northwest residents said they often saw him tearing up the streets with his buddies on their fast Japanese bikes. After the traffic division was dissolved in 1999, he went to evening patrol in North Roanoke. Also, he worked late nights on weekends as a security guard at the Texas Tavern. "He seemed like a nice guy" who would joke with the customers, said Steve Russell, a short-order cook. One of the charges on the indictment says Pledge provided security for drug dealers' parties and that he provided security while a 10-15 kilogram cocaine deal was made. But Rico Rourk, who throws parties and hired Pledge to work security, said such characters were never at his parties and Pledge was well-respected officer. "He was a nice guy," Rourk said. The two other officers on administrative leave also worked security at the parties. Connie Lee, an officer who recently died in a motorcycle crash, also worked the parties, Rourk said. Ask most people who knew Pledge on the street and they'll agree that he was a nice guy. "He was one of the few cops who looked out for you," said John Smith, who grew up in Northwest. "It seemed like everybody who came in said 'Hi' to him," said Freeland Pendleton, who owns La'Cove Restaurant in Northwest. Pledge would stop at the restaurant nearly every Thursday for the fried chicken special, Pendleton said. "He seemed like a real nice fellow." But with words like racketeering and drug dealing now associated with his name, the reputation Pledge has built could be tainted forever. Young says that's the reason he's taking his client's case to the mat. "We're going to battle." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk