Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 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 BUDGET SLASH SPELLS END OF 'BLACK EYE' DRUG FORCE MARION, Ark. - Calling it an embarrassment and a "black eye,'' the Crittenden County Quorum Court debated disbanding the county's drug task force Tuesday, then voted instead to cut off more than half its annual budget. The 10-0 vote will have the practical effect of ending the sheriff's department's controversial interstate interdiction effort by the end of June. The sheriff's drug task force is separate from one operated by the West Memphis Police Department. The FBI is investigating both to see if officers have been skimming some of the money confiscated from vehicles they stop on the Crittenden County interstates. Three West Memphis police officers were fired last year for violating policies regarding seized cash, including two who were caught in FBI stings. No one has been charged, and U.S. Atty. H. E. 'Bud' Cummins has declined comment on the ongoing probe. Sheriff Dick Busby said shortly after Tuesday's vote that he assumed the county's program would end without the continued funding for deputies' salaries. "I don't think they'll work for nothing,'' he said. The overall Crittenden County drug interdiction effort, including the West Memphis Police Department's caseload, has resulted in cash seizures of more than $5.4 million in the past 2d years, or slightly more than half of all the cash seized statewide during that period. Crittenden County government received $551,211 in drug forfeiture money last year, records show. On a motion from Justice of the Peace Vickie Robertson, whose position is equivalent to a county commissioner's, the Quorum Court voted to cut appropriated funds for the task force from $488,811 to $210,000 for the fiscal year that's already nearly half over. County Treasurer Larry Miller said the vote effectively "eliminates the program . . . eliminates the jobs.'' Miller said he would talk to Busby to make necessary adjustments to pay vacation hours and other expenses before the program shuts down. The sheriff's drug task force is overseen by a supervising sheriff's deputy while two deputies work the interstate. Another deputy associated with the interdiction programrecently left the department for another job. The compromise motion Tuesday passed following a debate on a motion by Justice Vera Simonetti to disband the task force "as of today.'' Simonetti said newspaper stories about the federal probe reflected badly on local law enforcement. "I don't want to be a party to it,'' she said. "This is unfair to the people of this county. It's embarrassing.'' Justice L. D. Callan agreed. "We are getting an awful bad black eye,'' he said. Although Simonetti's motion got the required second from Robertson, it was later withdrawn in favor of the funding cut-off. A formal ordinance for what Miller called "an appropriation amendment in reverse'' will be considered at the June meeting. Justice Jim Turner said that he had been disappointed with the task force's compliance with requests from the Quorum Court for reports of confiscated cash and property. Pros. Atty. Brent Davis in Jonesboro said he wasn't familiar with the court's vote Tuesday and declined comment on its financial impact. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh