Pubdate: Sun, 02 Mar 2003 Source: Savannah Morning News (GA) Copyright: 2003 Savannah Morning News Contact: http://www.savannahnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/401 Author: Tom Barton BARTON: GBI SHOULD BE INSULATED FROM RANK, SMALL-TOWN POLITICS Anyone who believes politics are separate from policing should read the four-part series "Justice Betrayed," which began last Thursday and concludes in today's Morning News. The articles, which described the botched investigation of a suspicious death of a black man in Vidalia six years ago and how an aggressive Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent who was working that case was given the bum's rush by her bosses, confirms that law enforcement can be highly political. It's not a pretty picture. Indeed, it makes it difficult for Georgians to tell the good guys from the bad guys. For example, here's what Toombs County Coroner Mandel Edenfield said when reporters Tuck Thompson and Bret Bell started nosing around Vidalia and approached him with questions about Henry Dickerson Jr., 28, a local ne'er-do-well whose body was found submerged in the city attorney's swimming pool in 1997: "Are y'all trying to stir up trouble with the niggers?" Edenfield responded. Clearly, he's one elected official who's a product of his time -- 1860, to be exact. But give Edenfield a smidgen of credit. He may be a racist, but at least he's no phony. You know where you stand with him (the back of the bus, in some cases). Any white guy who uses the N-word when talks to reporters is baring his soul. In addition to his empty head. The same can't be said for higher-ups in the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. That's the statewide law enforcement agency that's the last line of defense for citizens faced with inept, unprofessional or even corrupt county sheriffs and police departments in rural Georgia. What you see with the GBI isn't always what you get. This series went into great detail about the roadblocks that a GBI special agent, Vickey Horton Tapley, faced while she tried to do her job in Vidalia, a southeast Georgia city that was part of her assigned coverage area. She worked the Dickerson death. She also initiated a drug investigation of Vidalia's city manager, a man who also seemed to have an inordinate amount of interest in the Dickerson case. Tapley sounded like a bulldog. For instance, when her superior asked her to investigate a tip that Vidalia's city manager may be indulging in illicit substances, she recruited the estranged wife of a city police lieutenant to work a possible sting operation. That wasn't her brightest move. The woman, as it turned out, blabbed to her husband. He told Vidalia's police chief, who in turn alerted the city manager. Still, aren't drug investigations part of the GBI's mission? Aren't agents supposed to follow orders? Apparently not -- at least not when it rocks the boat and even powerful state lawmakers, who control funding for the GBI, start paying attention. It's noteworthy that House Speaker Terry Coleman, a Democrat from Eastman -- the same small town where Tapley was based -- suggested that reporters stop asking questions about the Tapley case. Coleman said it might jeopardize her employment. How touching. One of the top officials in state government cares deeply about an agent's job security. But others who were far above her on the GBI's career ladder, such as former director Milton "Buddy" Nix (who now chairs Georgia's parole board) and current director Vernon Keenan, apparently placed a higher priority on maintaining a cozy, working arrangement with Vidalia's top officials. Certainly, teanwork in policing is good. However, GBI officials should stand up for agents who know their jobs and do them well. That didn't happen in this case. When Vidalia's mayor, Ronnie Dixon, and his city manager and police chief complained to the GBI about Tapley, Nix and Keenan should have told them to take a hike. It was Tapley who was reassigned. But that wasn't the worst humiliation that the agent endured. Her GBI superiors knew that Vidalia's police chief had illegally listened to and transcibed three telephone calls Tapley made, including one to her former GBI supervisor and mentor, Glenn Meeks. They, along with the county's district attorney or Attorney General Thurbert Baker, could have barbecued the chief's behind. No one fired up a grill. Nix and Keenan got their current jobs courtesy of Roy Barnes, the former governor. Gov. Sonny Perdue, who talks a good game about ethics and responsible government, should find out whether these two officials care about serving the public's interests. He also should find a way to insulate the GBI from rank, small-town politics. The biggest question raised by this series isn't whether Toombs County's coroner has a white sheet hanging in his closet. It's whether the GBI waves too many white flags. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh