Pubdate: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2000 Charleston Gazette Contact: 1001 Virginia St. E., Charleston, WV 25301 Fax: (304) 348-1233 Feedback: http://www.wvgazette.com/static/Forum.html Website: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Author: Lawrence Messina DEA TACKLING BACKLOG OF EVIDENCE AT DRUG LAB U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents arrived in Charleston Monday to help tackle the growing pile of drug evidence left untested since investigations prompted the State Police to shut down the drug section of its crime lab. A U.S. District Court judge, meanwhile, has unfrozen the nine federal drug cases which were suspended just before the Drug Identification Section was closed amid allegations of "certain inconsistencies" involving its work. State Police Superintendent Gary Edgell told the state's 55 county prosecutors last week that a team of DEA agents would partly re-open the closed section to temporarily help with the backlog of drug evidence. Details regarding the agents' exact role were still being worked out Monday, according to the U.S. Attorney's office, which fielded questions about the agents' offer of help. For thousands of state and federal drug cases in West Virginia, the crime lab section tests for whether seized evidence contains a controlled substance, and assesses the purity and weight of the drugs. County and federal prosecutors had nowhere to go with their evidence when the lab was closed and its five staff members placed on paid leave earlier this month. The State Police shut down the section after Judge Charles H. Haden II postponed hearings in nine different drug cases. U.S. Attorney Rebecca Betts asked that action be suspended in the cases in a court memorandum that was then sealed. State Police initially said that "certain inconsistencies" in the section's work, discovered internally, prompted the shutdown. State officials have since said that a worker in the lab complained about the work of another. The Gazette has learned that one of the section's three troopers complained that one of its civilian employees was logging in more tests than reasonably could be done. The civilian, Todd Owen McDaniel, 31, has not responded to repeated requests for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake