Pubdate: Tue, 11 Mar 2003 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2003 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 SUPPLY AND COMMAND Patrol needs to be dealing with locksmiths Five hundred pounds of marijuana disappeared last week. But it's the evidence room in the Highway Patrol office on U.S. 301 that got burned. A thief (or thieves) earned maximum profit for minimal effort - little stood in the way of making crime pay. All it took to net drugs with a street value between $500,000 and $600,000 was the ability to break glass in a door and turn a knob. The office had no security cameras. No alarm sounded. The average new car offers more security than was found in the patrol office. It's natural to assume that a law-enforcement office would be the first place that a crook would get caught. Not in this case. It's embarrassing when law enforcement gets hit with a crime wave in one of its own offices. Red faces aren't the worst consequences, however. Drugs are back on the street. Evidence held for the prosecution of a drug case vanishes, and this could mean a suspect walks without having to answer charges. Depending upon the suspect and the evidence taken - and what happens to the drugs later - the consequences could be serious indeed. Joe Latta, a consultant on securing evidence rooms, says his personal file contains 3,500 newspaper clippings about evidence room break-ins. It's not an unusual crime. Sometimes it's an "inside" crime. Sometimes it isn't. The break-in isn't the first time an evidence room was tampered with - not even in Cumberland County - but it ought to be the last. The patrol office is more accustomed to holding paperwork for traffic violations than for drug cases. But the office didn't even have a simple deadbolt, which indicates that the patrol needs to put out a security alert for itself. Or shop for a better watchdog. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh