Pubdate: Sat, 25 May 2002 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2002 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Lawrence Messina, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) ANOTHER SHAKE-UP AT STATE POLICE LAB Sergeant Fired; Captain Resigns The State Police on Friday fired the sergeant whose testing of suspected drug evidence prompted internal and FBI investigations of the crime lab's work. Timothy Grant White had been on paid leave since March, when Superintendent Howard Hill ordered the retesting of four months' worth of White's lab results. The chief of the entire crime lab, meanwhile, has resigned. Capt. Rick Theis also had been placed on paid leave for failing to tell Hill of a June 2001 lab report "discrepancy" that first raised suspicions about White's work. The State Police has completed its internal probe of the lab's Drug Identification Section, but has not yet released any findings, general counsel Kelly Ambrose said. "That investigation is over," she said Friday. "The FBI continues to examine aspects of this." Ambrose did say that the decision to fire White, 35, arose from the internal review. White's firing is but the latest shake-up at the South Charleston lab. The state's only facility for testing criminal evidence has been repeatedly buffeted by allegations of sloppiness and worse since the early 1990s. White was initially given credit in 2000 after tipping off superiors to shoddy lab work by a civilian co-worker, Todd Owen McDaniel. McDaniel, 33, later pleaded guilty to a fraud charge for falsely reporting results for drug analysis tests he never conducted. The discovery of McDaniel's wrongdoing shut down the drug section and forced the retesting of all of its evidence. Both state and federal drug cases pending throughout West Virginia were thrown into turmoil. The section was reopened and declared trouble-free in 2001. Though a problem with White's test results was discovered that June, Hill said he was not informed of it until March. When the FBI investigated McDaniel, it also reviewed the work of others in the drug section. The FBI's confidential report of that probe said White had periodically failed to conduct "preliminary testing" then required by lab policy. The report, obtained by The Charleston Gazette earlier this year, also said that White showed signs of deception during a lie detector test. The State Police revamped the entire crime lab in 1994, amid a scandal involving one of its former section chiefs. Exaggerated tests, altered lab reports and false testimony by Fred Zain have been blamed for at least a half-dozen wrongful convictions. The State Police has repeatedly maintained that no one has been wrongly accused, convicted or imprisoned because of misconduct at the Drug Identification Section. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom