Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jul 2003 Source: Robesonian, The (NC) Copyright: 2003 The Robesonian Contact: http://www.robesonian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1548 Author: Matt Elofson STRICKLAND QUITS SHERIFF'S OFFICE District Attorney Considering Perjury Charges LUMBERTON -- A Robeson County sheriff's drug enforcement supervisor who faces possible perjury charges has resigned. Sheriff Glenn Maynor had already placed C.T. Strickland, a 13-year veteran of the Sheriff's Office, on paid administrative. That came after an investigation by the state Sheriff's Education and Training Standards Commission that began after a judge found that Strickland falsified a search warrant. John Bason, a spokesman for the Attorney General's Office, declined to give details on the investigation. "It's an ongoing investigation," he said. Bason said the Sheriff's Education and Training Standards Commission is a state body that sets the standards for people to be certified as a law enforcement officer in North Carolina. He said a possible outcome of such an investigation is the revocation of certification. District Attorney Johnson Britt said he is still considering whether or not to pursue a criminal indictment against Strickland on charges of perjury. Maynor confirmed Monday that Strickland resigned June 27, about two weeks after he was put on leave for an undetermined amount of time. Maynor said he placed Strickland on paid adminstrative lead because of concerns about "credibility." There had been a possibility that Strickland might be reassigned within the Sheriff's Office. He had worked the past eight years as the drug enforcement supervisor. Maynor said he has not yet decided on a replacement for Strickland. Strickland would not answer a reporter's telephone call. Strickland's resignation comes nearly a year after Superior Court Judge Gregory Weeks ruled that Strickland made false statements to obtain a search warrant. Britt said that was the reason he dismissed drug charges against two men. According to Britt, it was the application for a search warrant that was in question. The warrant application Strickland completed said that information came from single information whom the Sheriff's Office had used before and found reliable. Two informants were actually used, neither of whom had ever been used before, Britt said. He also said Strickland consolidated information from the two informants into a single reference. Judge Weeks found the application for the warrant contained material misrepresentations of fact, which made any evidence seized in the case unusable. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart