Pubdate: Mon, 15 Jul 2002 Source: Island Packet (SC) Copyright: 2002,sThe Island Packet Contact: http://www.islandpacket.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1514 Author: Aretha Frison COUNTY FORCED TO THROW OUT DRUG CASES Officials Say New Lab May Help Trials The Beaufort County Solicitor's Office has tossed out more than 300 drug cases in the past few months, officials said. Beaufort County Deputy Solicitor Steve Knight said the cases had collected dust for more than three years because authorities couldn't find investigators and witnesses in order to prosecute the defendants after waiting months for a state agency to analyze the drug evidence. Before the Beaufort County Regional Drug Lab opened in March, evidence from the drug cases would be sent to the State Law Enforcement Division in Columbia. The agency also analyzes evidence for several law enforcement agencies throughout the state. Knight said the results would take more than a year to be sent back to Beaufort County. He and Beaufort County Sheriff P.J. Tanner said the delay in analyzing the drugs prevented hundreds of drug cases from going to court. "Sometimes these cases didn't have the defendants or the evidence because the defendants would be bailed out of jail and then it would take SLED a long time to analyze the drugs," Tanner said. Most of the drug cases that were eliminated from the Solicitor's Office involved the Beaufort County Drug Task Force going undercover to make a "sale" with drug dealers throughout the county, Knight said. "Most of the time, the (informant) was gone, moved, or, in some cases, even died," he said. Tanner said it was unfortunate that the drug cases had to be thrown out. "About 300, maybe even 400 cases the Solicitor's Office were looking at had to be tossed out because no (informants) were around, no officers were around, and we didn't have any witnesses around, either," he said. The sheriff said witnesses wouldn't want to testify in court or they would move away before the planning stages for trial. "When you sit around on a case for four years," Tanner said, "you are going to have a problem finding your informants and witnesses." Officials hope the Beaufort County Regional Drug Lab, which also assists Jasper, Hampton and Colleton counties, will make a difference. The county lab, partly funded by a $100,000 federal grant, was designed to process drug evidence in a month, said Debbie Szpanka, spokeswoman for the Beaufort County Sheriff's Office. "We can move faster now to get these cases to court," Knight said. "This problem shouldn't happen again or be as dramatic as in the past." - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel