Pubdate: Thu, 31 Jul 2003 Source: Commercial Appeal (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://www.gomemphis.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 Author: Matt Volz TUNICA COUNTY SHERIFF FACES NEW CHARGES STEMMING FROM ALLEGED EXTORTION BRANDON, Miss. - Tunica County Sheriff Jerry Ellington, one day after his arrest on federal extortion and bribery charges, was served Thursday with a similar state complaint. The state documents were served during a court appearance in Rankin County. A $25,000 bond was ordered by Rankin County Judge Kent McDaniel, appointed special judge to hear the state case. There was no immediate word on whether Ellington had posted the bond. The state alleges that on June 6, Ellington demanded and collected $2,500 from bail bondsmen with Hampton Company National Surety in Rankin County in exchange for Ellington's referring individuals to the company. The company writes bonds in Tunica County. FBI agents first took Ellington into custody Wednesday. He is accused in the four-count federal indictment of using his office to secure kickbacks from stolen drug money and from a bail bond business wanting to operate in his county. Ellington, who faces four opponents in Tuesday's primary election, took office in 2000 after John Pickett III resigned after pleading guilty to extorting a bail bondsman in the largely rural county of 9,200 that is home to several casinos. The 45-year-old sheriff was taken to Oxford for an initial appearance Wednesday afternoon before U.S. Magistrate Judge S. Allan Alexander, who released him on a $10,000 unsecured bond. His arraignment is scheduled for Tuesday. Rankin County officials said Ellington was present for Thursday's hearing in Brandon. The federal and state charges follow an investigation by the FBI, the U.S. attorney and the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation. "We have been investigating this for a long time," U.S. Attorney Jim Greenlee said. Jeff Piselli, a spokesman for the county, said Chief Deputy Leonard Conway had taken over Ellington's duties pending the outcome of the case. The department has about 150 deputies, officials said. "The sheriff will remain sheriff until he is voted out of office or he leaves office for one reason or another. He was elected by the people," Piselli said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Chad Lamar said the investigation was continuing but wouldn't comment on whether other arrests were imminent. The federal indictment charges that Ellington took payoffs of more than $5,000 from a bail bondsman from May to July. Ellington allegedly would take cash payments plus 30 percent of the premium on every bond written in exchange for allowing the bondsman to operate in the county. Ellington would also allegedly refer individuals arrested by the sheriff's office to the bondsman. Ellington's predecessor, John J. Pinkett III, pleaded guilty in 1999 of extorting $85,000 over three years from a bail bondsman. He was sentenced to 20 months in prison. Federal prosecutors also allege that from June 2002 to Jan. 3, Ellington took kickbacks of more than $5,000 after promoting a Tunica County deputy to a narcotics position, where the deputy could steal money from drug dealers and split it with Ellington. If convicted, Ellington faces a combined maximum sentence of 60 years in prison and $1 million in fines. Ellington's arrest comes more than a month after 17 deputies claimed in a federal lawsuit that Ellington had threatened their jobs if they did not support his re-election bid. The deputies' lawsuit, filed in federal court in Oxford, claimed Ellington told them their employment depended on purchasing $25 tickets for a May campaign banquet and providing other assistance to his campaign. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens