Pubdate: Fri, 07 Jun 2002 Source: Commercial Appeal (TN) Copyright: 2002 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://www.gomemphis.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 Author: Bartholomew Sullivan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) FEDS SEARCH HOMES OF 2 IN PROBE OF CRITTENDEN SHERIFF'S DRUG UNIT FBI and IRS agents executed search warrants at the homes of a member and a former member of the Crittenden County Sheriff's Drug Task Force on Thursday in a widening federal probe of interstate drug enforcement units. Sheriff's deputy Barry A. Davis's home on Richland Drive in West Memphis and former deputy Louis F. Pirani's home on Geelan Drive in Marion were pored over for more than five hours as curious neighbors stopped to see what was up. Neither man was arrested, and Davis remains on active duty with the sheriff's department. Agents were seen leaving Davis's home with guns, including one equipped with a scope. The searches come a week after Crittenden County's Quorum Court, similar to a county commission, voted to cut off funding to the sheriff's drug interdiction effort. Sheriff Dick Busby notified seven employees whose salaries are funded by the drug task force that they would be terminated as of June 30 because of the Quorum Court's action. One of those notified was Davis. In the midst of the ongoing controversy, County Judge Melton Holt, whose job is equivalent to a county administrator's, on Monday wrote to the lead FBI agent in the probe asking "that the investigation proceed with haste," according to a copy of the letter obtained by The Commercial Appeal. Holt wrote that rumors are flying across the county and "the public has a right to know and innocent employees need to be exonerated, while guilty parties need to be charged and prosecuted." And in another development, longtime Quorum Court member Vera Simonetti, a frequent critic of the drug task force who called for its complete elimination at the court's May 28 meeting, was pulled over on an interstate service road by deputy Barry Davis on Tuesday evening and given a traffic citation for a burned-out taillight. Simonetti played down the incident, saying there had been no confrontation and that the taillight had in fact gone out and has been replaced. She appears in West Memphis Municipal Court on the infraction on June 24. In Little Rock on Thursday, both U.S. Atty. H.E. 'Bud' Cummins and FBI spokesman Brian Marshall said they could not comment on the ongoing investigation, which is believed to be focused on cash seizures from suspected drug couriers in a county that has pulled $5.4 million in cash from the interstates in the past 2d years. Three West Memphis police officers were fired last year for violating procedures involving seized cash after two of them were caught in FBI sting operations. Those two also had their homes searched by federal agents. None of the former West Memphis officers has been charged. Davis, 33, who makes $29,493 as a sheriff's deputy, lives in a house on a double lot in West Memphis appraised by the county at $280,950. Records also show Davis and his wife own a 2001 Honda motorcycle valued at $6,350, a 1997 Pontiac Grand Prix worth $8,950, a 1985 Toyota pickup valued at $2,050 and a 2000 Chevy Tahoe valued at $22,200. Davis is known to fly a single-engine 1960 Cessna airplane titled in his father's name worth $35,500 that's parked at the West Memphis Municipal Airport. His father's student pilot license has expired and he can't legally fly, Federal Aviation Administration records show. Both Davis and Pirani have current pilot's licenses. When Pirani, 37, left the sheriff's office earlier this year he was making the same $29,493 as Davis. According to his former boss, Drug Task Force commander Mickey Thornton, Pirani now works as a federal air marshal. A for sale sign sits in his front yard. Records show the red-brick house with the brick and wrought iron privacy fence, pool and detached garage is appraised at $195,400. In addition, records show he and his wife own a 2000 Pontiac Bonneville worth $14,700, a 2000 Ford F-250 pickup valued at $19,300 and a 1997 Harley Davidson motorcycle worth $9,150. Davis, whose father-in-law is second-in-command of the eight-county Arkansas State Police troop based in Forrest City, is a longtime member of the sheriff's interstate drug interdiction effort. Davis was one of several members of a previous incarnation of the county's drug task force listed as suspects and investigated for theft in 1993. Pros. Atty. Brent Davis asked for that investigation, conducted by the Arkansas State Police but decided not to pursue criminal charges. By the time the federal agents drove up to Davis's house with their tinted-windowed cars at 9:56 Thursday morning, the federal probe had been under way for more than 15 months. West Memphis Police Chief Robert H. Paudert has said he went to the FBI with his suspicions shortly after taking over the department and has been assisting when asked for help. An FBI sting operation involving $45,000 in counted money "seized" by West Memphis patrolman Joseph W. Applegate on Interstate 40 in March 2001 led to his firing in October. Applegate's official report of that broken taillight traffic stop, as well as a forfeiture lawsuit on file in Marion, indicate marijuana was found with the cash, making it subject to forfeiture under state law. However, Paudert said the FBI assured him the pickup and cash were clean and did not contain a trace of marijuana. In another instance, money counted by the FBI and seized by West Memphis Sgt. E. A. 'Tony' Bradley on the parking lot of the Southland Greyhound Park, came up short, according to West Memphis personnel records. Bradley also was fired. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth