Pubdate: Fri, 05 Sep 2003 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2003 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Matt Williams Related http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03/n1339/a05.html?1149 POLICE AGENCIES FIND SURPLUS COST-EFFICIENT The last time a bayonet saw action in Greensboro was in 1781, when Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene faced off against Lord Cornwallis in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. When the battle lines closed, hundreds of soldiers fought each other with the blades in close combat. Two hundred and sixteen years after that battle, officers with the Greensboro Police Department saw that a modern equivalent was available from stocks of surplus military equipment. They put in a request for the weapons to assist in the department's efforts "toward narcotics enforcement and other related law enforcement purposes." Their request was approved three weeks later: 45 bayonets. Greensboro police Capt. Craig Hartley said the department asked for the bayonets because they were free and narcotics agents needed something to pry open doors and cut down marijuana plants during raids. Hartley said they are not intended to be used against people. Bayonets are just one of 1,826 kinds of military hardware obtained by state police agencies through a federal program. Armored vehicles, weight-lifting equipment, a portable classroom and a mine detector have gone out to departments in the last 10 years. Many have stockpiled as much equipment as possible, just in case. "If they'd offer us a spaceship, we'd take it," said Detective Vic Maynard of the Guilford County Sheriff's Department. "Better off get it and not need it than to say 'Well, I wish we would have got that a year ago.'" Police agencies have accepted equipment that cost the military more than $84 million, according to state records. The agencies only pay for shipping. Greensboro isn't the only department to ask for bayonets. More than 1,200 bayonets have been issued to police departments statewide, including 10 to the Randolph County Sheriff's Department, nine to the Liberty Police Department and five to High Point police. The most common big-ticket items awarded to police are surplus trucks. The Randolph County Sheriff's Office has received 18 military trucks since 1994. Maj. Fred Rutledge said the trucks were used when the department moved its offices to a new building, saving the cost of hiring a private firm. Rutledge said deputies also need four-wheel-drive vehicles during icy weather. The department also has two V-100 armored vehicles, which Rutledge said are available to be used in a standoff with an armed suspect. The department's most expensive item was a $194,000 portable radio tower left over from the U.S. Army Signal Corps in Fort Gordon, Ga. Rutledge said his department didn't really need a tower but accepted it when it was offered. It sat in storage for four years, until Wilkes County took it off the department's hands. Wilkes County sheriff's Capt. Greg Minton said getting the tower was a godsend for them because the department's radio system didn't cover about a third of the mountainous county. The department plans to install the 114-foot aluminum tower permanently to eliminate radio dead spots. Many smaller departments have also stocked up on military equipment. In 2000, the three-member police force of the Greensboro Alcoholic Beverage Control Board accepted a surplus Humvee from Camp Lejeune. Executive Director Katie Alley said officers thought the Humvee would make a good undercover vehicle for drug arrests and distillery raids. But when the truck was delivered in 2000, officers realized that they couldn't afford to repair the truck and make it drivable. They held onto it for two years and sold it to a private buyer for $12,000. Alley said much of the equipment the ABC police get is in poor condition and is sold off. In the case of the Humvee, the money generated from the sale went toward buying a police cruiser. But state officials say that program rules prohibit the sale of demilitarized equipment, like a Humvee, to the private sector. Neil Woodcock, who heads the state agency that approves military transfers, said his office wouldn't have allowed the Greensboro ABC to sell the Humvee if it knew of the sale. Woodcock said his office tries to encourage police agencies not to sell off equipment to make money. Though agencies are allowed to sell nonsensitive equipment after using it for a year, those that try to make money off the program shouldn't expect to get any more from the program, he said. Equipment has also gone to two privately run company police forces even though federal law says the equipment is only supposed to go to government-run law enforcement agencies. Greensboro's Koury Corp., which has a private police agency to provide security in the Four Seasons Town Centre mall, was given body armor and binoculars. The security force at Methodist College in Fayetteville got $27,000 in surplus equipment, including a pickup and a car. Woodcock said when the program began, there was a flood of requests and few rules. The agency's current rules prohibit private police forces from taking part in the program. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom