Pubdate: Tue, 12 Aug 2003 Source: Athens Review (TX) Copyright: 2003 Athens Daily Review Contact: http://www.athensreview.com/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3011 Author: Art Lawler LANGFORD TO HEAD COUNTY'S LONG-AWAITED NARCOTICS UNIT Sheriff Ronny Brownlow Finally Has His Fully-Funded Task Force. Just don't call it that. The governor's office is kind of sensitive on the issue. Better to call it the Henderson County Narcotics Enforcement Unit. A task force by any other name is fine with county authorities, so long as the current drug problems some much-needed attention. Brownlow went before the Henderson County commissioners at their Monday meeting to ask for a budget amendment of $1,045 to bring the grant position up to lieutenant's pay. The move enables Brownlow to transfer Lt. Kay Langford into that newly created position. The request was unanimously granted and County Judge David Holstein praised Brownlow for his "tenacity" in acquiring the grant. The vote enables Langford, 44, to become head of the new Henderson County Narcotics Enforcement Unit. She gives up her position as the head of the criminal investigation unit today to lead a department that will soon include five narcotics investigators. Langford is no stranger to law enforcement. She joined the department in 1989. On March 10, 1991, she was critically wounded after being shot while answering a domestic disturbance call just south of Athens. She fully recovered from her wounds and worked her way up the career ladder. She was promoted to an investigator's position in April of 1998 and became head of the unit when Brownlow took office on Jan. 1, 2001. He called her a dedicated professional who works with a lot of tenacity. "I'm really looking forward to working with this new unit," Langford said. "We have a big problem with drugs in our county, and I'm looking forward to working with this new unit to try to help curb this growing problem." Selecting Langford to head up the new narcotics division started a chain reaction of personnel changes, which begin today at the sheriff's department. The Athens Police Depart-ment will use its part of the grant to supply another narcotics investigator, and Gun Barrel City will add yet another full-time member. Neither Chief Jim Vance of APD nor Richard Miller of GBCPD has announced who will fill those positions, as of this morning. The cooperative effort will give all of the law-enforcement departments in the county access to five narcotics officers. They will work with the Department of Public Safety, the federal Drug Enforcement Agency and with the 15 law-enforcement entities within the county who have signed working agreements with the new association. The county, which has been overrun by the drug problem, had as few as one narcotics officer on duty in recent months before Botie Hillhouse was promoted to narcotics investigative duties along with Jody Miller. Besides those two from the sheriff's department, the unit will have Langford, who will work both as an administrator and as a hands-on investigator. Replacing Langford will be veteran sheriff's department investigator Dan Parker, 40, a veteran with 20 years experience, who has been promoted to lieutenant. Replacing Parker in the criminal investigation division, will be Sue Allison, 35, who has been promoted from detention officer in the county jail. She has prior investigative experience as part of the Gun Barrel City police department. Brownlow said a new employee would be hired to replace Allison as detention officer. "I was thrilled to get her back," Brownlow said of Allison's return from Gun Barrel less than a year ago. "She proved herself there. She's good at whatever job she's assigned to do." Brownlow also praised Parker as being highly professional, not to mention a lifetime resident of this area of East Texas after growing up in Brownsboro. Why the grant funds suddenly became available, no one is quite sure. The grant is actually federal money awarded to the state for distribution to the counties as it sees fit. And Henderson County didn't seem to fit. Politically speaking, task forces are something offered counties who write successful grants to the state soliciting federal dollars. Henderson County had already written two of its own, both of which had been turned down by the governor's office over the last 18 months. The reason given for the second "turn down" was that the governor's office had ruled such grants could only be awarded to "multiple counties." As the rules were established by the state, there were no counties realistically for Henderson County to partner up with. So disgruntled law officers in the county, fearing Henderson would be left out of the grant money altogether, met to form the county's own task force. The 15 law-enforcement entities in the county and their police chiefs at the time agreed to supply personnel and assistance, and money as they could afford it, for a narcotics unit to be headed up by the Henderson County Sheriff's Department. Though it wasn't immediately clear how they'd get the money, each entity agreed to meet with its city leaders in search of financial solutions. Before they could get the unit rolled out, though, the state had a change of heart. It sent the county and the Athens Police Department letters saying it had decided to provide funding for two narcotics officers -- one for the city and one for the county. The governor's office has awarded Henderson County with enough of the grant to fund two new narcotics officers for the next four years, and that was about what Brownlow was asking for in the creation of the new unit. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin