Pubdate: Tue, 09 May 2000 Source: Florida Times-Union (FL) Copyright: The Florida Times-Union 2000 Contact: http://www.times-union.com/ Forum: http://cafe.jacksonville.com/cafesociety.html Author: Terry Dickson SHERIFF'S OFFICES SEARCHED IN COFFEE DOUGLAS, Ga. -- FBI and Georgia Bureau of Investigation agents pored over documents yesterday at the Coffee County Sheriff's Department as they executed a search warrant to view files involving drug cases. Bill Butler, special agent in charge of the GBI's Douglas office, said only, "We're executing a warrant." Coffee County Sheriff Carlton Evans said his officers are cooperating with the agents as they continue operations. Evans said the search warrant may be a continuation of an investigation in neighboring Irwin County that resulted in the arrest of three high-ranking Coffee County deputies on charges of growing marijuana. Maj. Benjamin Hodge, 36, former chief deputy, was arrested Oct. 20, and Capt. Wayne Harper, who supervised the uniformed division, was arrested Nov. 1. Lt. John Lee, a patrol supervisor, was arrested Nov. 24. All three are free on bond and are on unpaid administrative leave. Five civilians were also arrested, authorities said. Butler was among more than a dozen state and federal agents who were searching the administrative offices at the law enforcement complex. Glass panels in office doors were marked with yellow and black police tape warning that the area was a crime scene. Although Butler said he could say nothing more about the activity behind that tape, Evans said the search was under way when he arrived for work at 8 a.m. The agents were examining documents in files and on computers and were looking for information on confidential informants and their pay, Evans said. The agents also were searching for information on a particular marijuana investigation, the department's policy and procedures for operating a drug investigation office at the airport and documents on the destruction of marijuana taken as evidence, he said. "That's what the search warrant said, and that's what we're doing our best to provide them with," Evans said. "I told them they didn't need a search warrant. Anything that's here, they're entitled to it." All administrative offices have been marked with crime scene tape and numbered for evidentiary purposes, Evans said. As Kathy Wilkerson sat at a desk at the entrance to the offices yesterday, an agent from the FBI's Atlanta office, who was wearing latex surgical gloves, leafed through a stenographer's pad. Word got out around Douglas of the search, and many people rode by slowly to check out the action. About all there was to see were agents bringing in bags of fast food. One deputy approached Evans in the courtroom and asked if she would be allowed to go to a restroom near the back of the building. Although the sealed-off offices and controlled movements have been an inconvenience, Evans said he has no problem with the way the agents are conducting the search. "They've got a job to do, and they're more than courteous," he said. Evans, who already faced a three-way race to retain his office in the Democratic primary in July, said the investigation will make it more difficult. "It's not going to help me. When your top people get arrested, it looks bad on you," he said. Coffee County Administrator Tom Couch said the county attorney is monitoring the situation at the Sheriff's Department. So far, the office has not been hampered in carrying out its law enforcement duties. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea