Pubdate: Sat, 08 Mar 2003 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2003 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Greg Barnes, Staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) THEFT RATTLES HIGHWAY PATROL'S POISE Breaking into the Highway Patrol's evidence room wasn't hard. The thieves just smashed the glass in a door at the back of the building on U.S. 301, turned the lock and walked in. There were no surveillance cameras or burglar alarms to deter them. Nobody else was in the building. The outside door didn't have a dead bolt. Previous It appeared that someone broke down the wooden door to the evidence room, which is just down the hall from the outside door. The break-in was discovered Thursday morning. Lawmen say the thieves made off with 500 pounds of marijuana valued at between $500,000 and $600,000. They left behind an embarrassed Highway Patrol. Patrol Sgt. Everett Clendenin said the break-in will cause the Highway Patrol to improve security at the Fayetteville headquarters. Clendenin said the patrol is also "looking at each district statewide to make sure that this doesn't happen in another district." Other Cases Reported The Fayetteville break-in wasn't a first for the Highway Patrol. In 1999 and 2000, a theft ring stole guns and drugs from four Highway Patrol district evidence lockers in northern North Carolina. Three in Virginia were also broken into. Four people were charged in that case. About the same time, Clendenin said, the Highway Patrol beefed up security as part of an effort to meet accreditation standards. Among other improvements were heavy steel evidence lockers for each district. But Clendenin said the large volume of marijuana that was stolen in Fayetteville wouldn't fit in the locker. It was left outside, along with another piece of evidence that wasn't disturbed during the break-in, he said. The marijuana came from a state Division of Motor Vehicles seizure during a traffic stop on Interstate 95 on Dec. 23. Clendenin said the Highway Patrol took over the evidence around Feb. 1, after the Division of Motor Vehicles merged with the Highway Patrol. He said the marijuana had been in the patrol's evidence room for about six days. "This has happened in the past and it's unfortunate and we can probably offer all kinds of excuses, but we just have to look at all the systems we have in place and try to improve on that," Clendenin said. The State Bureau of Investigation, which is handling the case, reported nothing new Friday. Deterrents Necessary Joe Latta, an instructor with the International Association for Property and Evidence, said evidence rooms should be secured with video cameras, burglar alarms, good locks and other theft deterrents. But Latta said theft from evidence rooms isn't unusual, largely because security is often lacking. He said he has a file of about 3,500 newspaper stories from around the country detailing thefts from evidence rooms. "It just never stops," Latta said. "Every day there is something new out there." Latta, a retired police officer, travels around the country teaching law enforcement agencies how to police and secure their evidence rooms. He had been scheduled to teach a course on the subject at the Justice Academy in Salemburg in April. The Highway Patrol had not signed up to attend, but it may now. "We are always looking for ways to improve our process and our business, and that is something we will take into consideration," Clendenin said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager