Pubdate: Sat, 27 Sep 2003 Source: Sun Herald (MS) Copyright: 2003, The Sun Herald Contact: http://www.sunherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/432 Author: Matt Volz, The Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) BUREAU OF NARCOTICS OFFICIALS' PAY INVESTIGATED JACKSON - The former deputy director and the chief of operations of the state Bureau of Narcotics were allegedly paid thousands of dollars in questionable overtime and compensation, the agency's own investigators have found. A report of those findings and others, reviewed by The Associated Press, have been turned over to the state Attorney General's Office and the state auditor for investigation. Deputy State Auditor Norman McLeod says the investigation, which covers a range of allegations from records fraud to misspent drug fighting money, has no timetable for completion. According to the MBN report, former deputy director Ronald Pitts was paid $4,587.36 on Aug. 8, 2002. That was compensation he claimed was owed him by the bureau before he retired, although his account differed from the state's by 152 hours. Rather than perform an audit to find the source of the discrepancy, Pitts allegedly ordered that he be paid the full amount. The report also says former chief of operations Bill Taylor was overpaid $3,211.70 for 111 hours of overtime. Much of that time was claimed from the bureau's marijuana eradication system for times of the year when marijuana does not grow. The report called Pitts' and Taylor's claims "excessive" but investigators did not have access to logs and diaries to verify the allegations against Taylor and Pitts made in an internal memo written earlier this year that outlined the investigation. "Those allegations are totally untrue," said Mark Carroll, an attorney representing Pitts and Taylor in a lawsuit against MBN director Frank Melton and agent Warren Buchanan. That lawsuit was filed in April over a memo that outlined details of the investigation. Melton was not available for comment Thursday about the latest investigation revelations. And in a related development, McLeod said no wrongdoing has been found so far in the transfer of two airplanes from the bureau to state agencies on the Gulf Coast. Investigators were looking into allegations that the airplanes were transferred at the request of a former aide to U.S. Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., in exchange for political favors. The internal report said Pitts received $18,568.25 in overtime above his base salary of $63,000 in 2001. Taylor received $30,304.91 in overtime above his salary of $60,000 for the same period, the internal investigation found. Taylor left the bureau in April 2002 and Pitts left that August, before Frank Melton replaced Donald Strange as director of the bureau. The MBN probe has so far resulted in the resignation of agent Gary White and the termination of Jimmy Saxton, who headed the bureau's marijuana eradication program. Investigators found that among the questionable items bought with counter-drug funds were 1,728 golf balls, 144 golf starter kits, 600 knit shirts and three leather jackets. Saxton, who was fired earlier this year, was accused of fraudulently changing records to increase his overtime pay. He is appealing the termination. White, who was accused of giving Saxton helicopter lessons without being a certified teaching instructor himself, resigned earlier this year. Saxton, Pitts, Taylor and former agent Robert Earl Pierce are suing Melton and Buchanan over the April memo outlining the allegations being probed. They say Melton and Buchanan leaked the memo to the press, and that the memo's allegations contained "materially false, libelous, slanderous and defaming material" against the four. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake