Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jan 2002 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2002 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Author: Jim Sparks, Journal Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) CONVICTED SHERIFF IS TIRED OF WAITING TO FIND OUT WHAT HIS SENTENCE IS Mountain County Officials May Try To Curb The Influence NEWLAND -- Nearly 10 months after he was convicted of extortion and civil-rights violations, former sheriff Richard Buchanan of Avery County is still awaiting sentencing. He is living in Crossnore and dealing with heart problems, financial problems and boredom as he waits for federal probation officers to finish gathering information for a judge to consider when handing down a sentence. Buchanan could get as much as 20 years in prison for the extortion conviction and a year for the civil-rights violation. Though presentencing reports are usually finished within six or seven months, they can and have taken longer than the 10 months Buchanan has waited, officials with the U.S. Attorney's Office in Charlotte said. That isn't what Buchanan wants to hear. He said that although he's scared about the prospect of going to prison, he would rather face his fate than have it hanging over his head. "I want them to do whatever they're going to do. This waiting around is killing me," Buchanan said. "I don't know what to do or when to do it, because I don't know what they're going to do. This waiting around is worse than being in prison." Waiting for the sentencing has been tough on the citizens of Avery County as well. Buchanan's story has forced officials and residents alike to rethink their views of the sheriff's office. As in many rural counties, the role of sheriff carries with it a coveted larger-than-life quality. It also carries tangible power, in the form of jobs and influence that allows the officeholder to share with patrons and supporters. At one time, the sheriff was - in essence - the entire judicial system in some rural counties, Superior Court Judge Julius Rousseau said during the hearing to remove Buchanan from office in April 2000. "Things change, people change and the law changes ... Avery County is going to have to change a little, too," Rousseau said. If the number of phone calls Buchanan still receives from well-wishers is any indication, this change is going to take place slowly. Some residents refuse to make him a pariah and still believe - as Buchanan has maintained all along - that political infighting between the sheriff and county commissioners is a root cause of his troubles. "My phone constantly stays busy," Buchanan said. "I still get lots of calls from people telling me they don't believe the garbage that's been said about me for a minute.... It's good to know that people in the county still support me." For current Sheriff Ed Gwyn, who is serving out the rest of Buchanan's term, the county's political heritage is something of an albatross. Trying to avoid being pulled under by the strong political undertow has always been "the toughest part of the job," he said. "I just try to do my job and stay out of that part of it," Gwyn said. "Sometimes it's hard." A Rural County Buchanan, a former mayor and chief of police in Newland, was elected sheriff in 1998. Avery County sits nestled deep in the Blue Ridge Mountains on the Tennessee border. It was formed in 1911 from Caldwell, Mitchell and Watauga counties and was named in honor of Col. Waightstill Avery, a Revolutionary War soldier and former state attorney general. Burley tobacco and Christmas trees are top crops. Tourists flock to its small towns each fall to check out the colorful changing leaves; in the winter, they come to buy Christmas trees and ski. Buchanan's troubles began in earnest with the arrest of Danny Shane Pritchard on May 16, 1999. Pritchard was stopped after leading deputies on a chase. He was handcuffed and put in a patrol car. Buchanan was accused of pulling him from the back of the car, slamming him face down on the hood and kicking him in the torso. "I probably should have just left him alone because I was angry," Buchanan said. "He did spit on me and kick me and elbow me, but if I had let the boys handle it there probably wouldn't have been a problem. I probably put him on the hood a little too hard, but it's a felony to spit in an officer's face." Two months later, on July 16, deputies stopped a car occupied by Ward Courtney Tingley and Christian Marvin Olson, both from the Seattle area, at a roadblock near the Tennessee border. When deputies searched their car, they found several items, including a large sum of cash, a gun, a bag of marijuana and what investigators thought were hallucinogenic mushrooms. Tests later showed that they were dried bananas. Olson was charged with driving while impaired. He and Tingley were also arrested on possession charges. Though the two men said that they had more than $8,000 in cash when arrested, sheriff's officials reported that only about $6,200 had been seized. Tingley and Olson were sentenced to time served and released after contributing $4,000 to the sheriff's drug fund and pleading guilty to misdemeanor possession of marijuana. They later testified that Buchanan told them that if they didn't make a "voluntary" contribution to the drug fund, he would see that they remained in jail until their court date in September. "They weren't forced; they had a choice," Buchanan said. "They could have gone to court. Yes, they might have had to wait a month or so but look at me. I've been waiting 10 months and I haven't been sentenced." In the fall of 1999, county commissioners questioned Buchanan about the way he handled his office's finances, particularly the establishment of the drug fund, which had been set up independent of county financial officials. The matter was referred to District Attorney Tom Rusher, who called in agents with the State Bureau of Investigation. Buchanan was arrested Feb. 3, 2000, on state assault and embezzlement charges. The charges were eventually moved to federal court. Nearly a year after his conviction, Buchanan continues to maintain his innocence. He blames a former chief deputy, Chris Cornett, for mishandling money seized during drug arrests. "I didn't steal. Others did. I just didn't pay enough attention," Buchanan said. Cornett eventually pleaded guilty in June 2000 to state charges of trying to buy the office of sheriff and obstructing justice by lying to investigators. He was sentenced to unsupervised probation and community service. Cornett was ordered to surrender his North Carolina law-enforcement certificate. Cornett has since moved out of the state. Buchanan also attributes part of his downfall to a vendetta by the Avery County Board of Commissioners because, he said, he wouldn't let them control his office. "Basically, this all boiled down to politics," he said. "They wanted me out so they forced me out." Not the First Buchanan was not the first lawman in Avery County to face criminal charges. Former Sheriff Clinton Phillips and Mike Ellenburg, one of Buchanan's former chief deputies, also had their days in court. Phillips, who was sheriff from 1982 to 1990, was charged with willful failure to discharge the duties of sheriff and embezzlement by a public official in connection with the mishandling of $13,490 seized in a 1989 drug investigation. Prosecutors dropped both charges after Phillips signed a statement admitting wrongdoing. He also agreed to pay back $9,172 that couldn't be accounted for and perform 150 hours of community service. Ellenburg, who was elevated to acting sheriff after Buchanan was removed from office, had been charged with 12 counts of embezzlement in 1987. As part of a plea bargain, prosecutors dropped those charges after Ellenburg pleaded guilty to conversion of property by a bailee, a misdemeanor. He received a two-year suspended sentence and was ordered to pay $4,500 in restitution. The history of top law-enforcement officers walking on the wrong side of the law has embarrassed many of the county's citizens. "We had one sheriff (Buchanan) under indictment and the interim sheriff (Ellenburg) had once been convicted of embezzlement, and here we were trying to bring in another sheriff (Phillips) who had been convicted of wrongdoing," said Robert "Nub" Taylor, the county clerk of court. "I want to remind people of that." Moving on Local officials also want Buchanan to be sentenced soon so they can put the incident behind them. "It's been like a cloud hanging over us," said the county manager, Don Baker. "This gave us a public black eye that was exposed statewide. Anytime you have an incident like this it's topical and newsworthy. The media's going to put you under a microscope." After the matter of appointing a new sheriff to replace Buchanan was put to rest in May 2000, Gwyn and the commissioners immediately began working to restore public confidence in the sheriff's office. Baker credited Gwyn with meeting the board more than halfway in the effort to reform the office. "Ed has been very cooperative with budget and policy matters," Baker said. "He and his staff have made a concerted effort to work with the county administration." Gwyn in turn has credited the commissioners with approving four new positions within his department and raising salaries - in part to help attract qualified applicants who may harbor lingering doubts about working in Avery County. "Because of all the negative publicity, people didn't want to work here," Gwyn said. "That took a while to overcome but now I feel like we've got the good people we need to do the job." Gwyn has also had to contend with the public perception of how the sheriff should handle the job. "We got some people here who feel that if somebody who's breaking the law gets abused a little when they're arrested that there's nothing wrong with that," Gwyn said. "Some people feel like they've got it coming. But as a law-enforcement officer, you don't rough anyone up if you can help it and you don't take bribes. That's what you agree to when you're sworn in. That's why you take an oath." So far, so good, some say. Taylor, the county clerk of court, praised Gwyn for running an honest office. He also said that with the election of the current board of commissioners in the fall of 2000, all aspects of county government appear to be moving in the right direction. "This situation has been painful but it has also been necessary because it has helped get rid of some people who needed to be weeded out," Taylor said. "The good-old-boy days are gone. The county is no longer run by the good old boys but by the will of the people." History of Power Since Colonial days, sheriffs have wielded enormous power. And with its role clearly defined in state laws and constitutions, the office of sheriff continues to be a powerful one, especially in the rural South. "There are lots of people who want to be his friend," said Harry Watson, the director of the Center for the Study of the American South at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "It also a political job that can influence hiring decisions in other realms of government, such as the school system. For this reason, holding the sheriff's office has long been a coveted political prize for both parties in the North Carolina mountains for quite some time." In regions such as the Northeast, counties are not the important political jurisdictions that they are in the South because towns and townships tend to dominate the local landscape, Watson said. In the towns, the chief of police is an appointed position, and officers are town employees not subject to the whims inherent in a patronage system. As a result, powerful sheriffs are more of a rural phenomenon, Watson said. Because the South has, until recently, been largely rural, the idea of a strong sheriff has taken hold in the Southern psyche. To prevent any backsliding, Avery County officials should consider limiting the hiring and firing powers of the sheriff, said Baker, the county manager. "I strongly favor a system where once a sheriff is elected, the only option he has is to hire his chief administrators," he said. Baker reasons that if other employees in the department could be fired only for cause, it would eliminate the need for a deputy to ignore misdeeds for fear of being fired. Professional standards would become stronger because turnover with each new sheriff could be minimized. Still, selling any reforms in a county grown accustomed to political patronage will be difficult. "It's a good idea, but we would get a lot of flack if we tried to implement it," Baker said. "The old political monster would raise its head. When a new sheriff is elected, they want to be able to hire and fire people at will. They would feel that if they had to keep somebody on, that person wouldn't be loyal to them. But I believe that people command loyalty, they don't demand it .... You're in a weakened position if you have to demand it. A good leader can command loyalty." That Buchanan continues to deny responsibility and maintain his innocence despite the convictions has led Baker to conclude that the former sheriff will never come to terms with his mistakes. "He'll go to his grave in denial," Baker said. "It's sad." - -Jim Sparks can be reached in Wilkesboro at (336) 667-5691 or at --- MAP posted-by: Jackl