Pubdate: Fri, 14 Dec 2001 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) Copyright: 2001 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Christian Bottorff, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) TWO POLICE OFFICERS JAILED IN DRUG RING AFTER FBI UNDERCOVER OPERATION Metro police officer Chris S. Walden and Lebanon police officer Joseph Elder had badges and guns and were on the front lines of fighting crime in their districts. Today, however, they are behind bars and thought to have operated a drug ring that put hundreds - maybe thousands - of pounds of marijuana on the streets of Middle Tennessee. Federal authorities arrested Walden and Elder on Wednesday after Walden, 32, tried to buy 600 pounds of marijuana for $20,000 from an undercover FBI agent, authorities say. Police said that Joseph Elder, a two-year canine officer with the Lebanon Police Department, provided most of the $20,000 to Walden to buy the marijuana. Investigators said Elder was to be the distributor for the two-man team. Both were selling marijuana for $600 a pound, police said. Elder was arrested in Lebanon yesterday. Last night, U.S. marshals had the two officers in custody. They are being held without bond until a detention hearing, federal authorities say. Police are still trying to find out more about how the drugs were dispersed, according to a news release from the Metro Police Department and the FBI. Both officers are charged with possessing and distributing marijuana and with using a firearm while trafficking. Each of the three charges carries a minimum penalty of five years in prison and a maximum $2 million fine. "I was surprised and also saddened," Metro Police Chief Emmett Turner said during a news conference yesterday at the Criminal Justice Center downtown. "This is one of those unfortunate situations where police officers are involved in illegal activity," Turner said. "And we have an obligation to investigate . just like we would with any other investigation." Authorities think Walden, a bicycle patrolman in the John Henry Hale public housing complex, bought 1,500 pounds of marijuana in the past year from Mexican sources. No other Metro officers were thought to be involved, police said yesterday. According to a personnel file, Walden had been suspended several times from work. He was suspended twice in 1997 when he backed his patrol car into another car and into a pole. He served a two-day suspension in 1996 when he was a trainee. The incident occurred in a parking lot at Clarksville Highway and Ashland City Highway, when Metro detective E.J. Bernard, dressed in plain clothes, noticed that Walden's Firebird had "obviously illegal tint" and handcuffs hanging from the rearview mirror. According to Bernard's account, Walden, wearing a baseball hat with "XXX" on the front, looked over at Bernard's police car, then left, squealing his tires. Capt. Honey Pike, then a sergeant in charge of recruitment, wrote a memo in 1996 addressing the issue. In her letter, she said she questioned the "trainee's maturity level, his motivation for wanting to become an officer, and his ability to work in an unsupervised environment." "Mr. Walden was by no means a standout in the academy," Pike wrote in the letter. "It is even questionable if he has or ever will apply himself any more than what is necessary to graduate." On a positive note, former Mayor Phil Bredesen wrote to Walden on Dec. 18, 1998, praising his work as an officer. A special unit he worked for, called FLEX, helped arrest numerous violent and repeat offenders. Bredesen's letter said that Capt. Bobby Dodson had recommended Walden, an original member of the unit, for the recognition. Aside from recovering scores of guns and making hundreds of felony arrests, the FLEX team seized 4 pounds of crack, 2 ounces of powder cocaine and 4 pounds of marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager