Pubdate: Fri, 08 Mar 2002 Source: Dispatch, The (NC) Copyright: 2002, The Lexington Dispatch Contact: http://www.the-dispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1583 Author: William Keesler EX-DEPUTIES PLEAD GUILTY GREENSBORO - Lengthy prison terms and hefty fines are possible for a couple of former Davidson County sheriff's deputies and other defendants who pleaded guilty Thursday to federal drug conspiracy charges. Former First Lt. David Scott Woodall, 34, who headed the sheriff's office vice/narcotics unit, faces from 17 years to life in prison, fines of up to $7.75 million and forfeiture of $250,000 in cash or property after pleading guilty to three separate counts under an agreement with prosecutors in U.S. District Court. Former sheriff's Lt. Douglas Edward Westmoreland, 50, who also worked in the vice/narcotics unit, faces five to 80 years in prison, fines of up to $3.25 million and forfeiture of $100,000 in cash or property after pleading guilty to two separate counts. Potential penalties would appear to be less for the other four defendants - former sheriff's Sgt. William Monroe Rankin, 32, former Archdale police Sgt. Christopher James Shetley, 41, and Lexington-area residents Wyatt Nathan Kepley, 26, and Marco Aurelio Acosta-Soza, 26 - who also entered guilty pleas Thursday. The federal sentencing system is a complex maze of points and levels that makes predictions of sentences difficult. The U.S. Attorney's Office agreed to recommend reductions in sentencing levels for the six defendants in exchange for Thursday's guilty pleas. But those are just recommendations to U.S. District Judge William Osteen, who has some discretion in how precisely he follows them. While expressing some indecision about what kinds of sentences to give former law enforcement officers, Osteen warned the defendants Thursday that parole has been eliminated in the prison system. "What active prison time you get is pretty much what you will serve," the judge said. He scheduled sentencing for Woodall, Westmoreland, Shetley, Kepley and Acosta-Soza, all of whom remain in jail, for June 14. Sentencing for Rankin, who remains free on bond, will be June 26. After an eight-month probe by the FBI and the State Bureau of Investigation, a federal grand jury indicted the six men last Dec. 7 on conspiracy to distribute cocaine, marijuana, steroids and Ecstasy. The grand jury added additional charges in a superseding indictment on Jan. 25. The defendants initially pleaded innocent but changed their pleas Thursday. They had been scheduled for trial this coming Monday. Woodall, who has been described in court as the "ringleader" of the conspiracy, pleaded guilty Thursday to conspiracy to distribute all four drugs, extortion and carrying a firearm during a crime of violence. The government agreed to dismiss another extortion charge and a charge of violating Kepley's civil rights during an illegal search. Westmoreland pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute just cocaine and marijuana and extortion. The government agreed to dismiss a charge of violating Kepley's civil rights. Westmoreland faces from five to 40 years in prison for cocaine conspiracy, up to 20 years for marijuana conspiracy, and up to 20 years for extortion. But federal sentences usually run concurrently rather than consecutively. He probably will get just a portion of the 80-year maximum for all three charges. Rankin, another vice/narcotics unit member, pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute just steroids and depriving Kepley of his civil rights. He faces at most six years in prison, fines of no more than $350,000 and forfeiture of an unspecified amount of property and $9,700 in cash. In an interview after the court hearing, Rankin's lawyer, Fred Robinson Harwell Jr. of Winston-Salem, said his client was less involved in the conspiracy than others and that evidence at the sentencing hearing will show Rankin was "a good officer." "I think he pleaded guilty to the appropriate charges," Harwell said. "He decided to do that because he wanted to admit his guilt and move on with his life." Kepley pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to distribute just steroids and to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He faces at most 15 years in prison, $500,000 in fines and forfeiture of $250,000 in cash or property. Shetley pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute just marijuana and Ecstasy. The government agreed to dismiss an extortion charge against him. Shetley faces up to 25 years in prison, fines of up to $1.25 million and forfeiture of property. Acosta-Soza pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute just cocaine and marijuana. He faces from five years to life in prison and fines of up to $6 million. Acosta-Soza, an illegal alien from Mexico, also faces possible deportation by U.S. immigration officials after he completes any prison sentence. Osteen, who said he already has started wrestling with the philosophical questions posed by sentencing former law enforcement officers, asked defense lawyers and prosecutors to provide him with guidance. The law enforcement officers might have provided public service during their careers that they should receive credit for in sentencing, Osteen said. But the good they did might be offset by the stigma they create for all law enforcement officers by violating the law, the judge added. "I don't have an answer for that," Osteen said. "But by sentencing (time) we've got to resolve that." Afterward, outside the federal courthouse, Shetley's father, the Rev. James Shetley, pastor of Gospel Light Free Will Baptist Church in Thomasville, said the judge should treat his son not as a police officer but as any citizen or "man on the street." Shetley's brother, Eric Shetley of Thomasville, who is mentioned in a federal affidavit in the case but not by name, said he regretted his brother would not have a chance during a trial to counter some of the allegations by the government's key witness, which Eric Shetley called lies. But he said he supports his brother and his brother's decision to plead guilty. "We're not saying anybody's perfect," Eric Shetley said. "Things happen." The guilty pleas, along with the January guilty plea by the key witness, former Thomasville police Sgt. Russell Earl McHenry Jr., are the first public corruption convictions for new U.S. Attorney Anna Mills Wagoner of Salisbury, who took office last Nov. 16. "I think that our offices - federal government and state government - worked well together" on the investigation, Wagoner said. "And we will not tolerate this kind of behavior from law enforcement officers." The investigation is continuing but Wagoner's office cautioned that does not necessarily mean additional charges will be filed. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart