Pubdate: Fri, 01 Oct 2004 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2004 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: Joe Biesk, Associated Press STUMBO CREATES STATE INVESTIGATION DEPARTMENT FRANKFORT -- Attorney General Greg Stumbo announced Thursday he was reorganizing his administration to create a new department called the Kentucky Bureau of Investigation. The KBI will, among other things, target distribution networks in the state's illegal drug trade, Stumbo said. It will consist of units that focus on drug investigations, public corruption and special investigations and Medicaid and welfare fraud. "Quite frankly, this office, in years past, didn't focus as much on drug investigation as they did some other things, and I'm not being critical .. ," Stumbo said. "But we're trying to turn our ship in a little bit different direction." During his campaign, Stumbo said he wanted to target illegal drug pushers in Kentucky. Stumbo appointed former Louisville police officer David James as KBI commissioner. James will head an agency that includes 35 investigators and managers. The department's "niche" will be attacking the illegal drug distribution system in the state, Stumbo said. The KBI is supposed to operate within the attorney general's office's existing budget, Stumbo said. KBI officials also will go after white-collar crime, Medicaid and welfare fraud and elder abuse, Stumbo said. In the department's drug-fighting efforts, KBI officials will target doctors and pharmaceutical companies that are illegally distributing drugs, Stumbo said. The attorney general's office will also begin prosecuting drug dealers through civil lawsuits, he said. "In order to control the crime in Kentucky, you have to control the drugs, and that's the bottom line," James said. But the attorney general's office will not have enough personnel to be effective, Lt. Gov. Steve Pence said in a phone interview. Stumbo's plan was "more window dressing" and would only duplicate what's already being done in the state, Pence said. Instead, the attorney general's office should focus on prosecuting drug dealers rather than investigating them, Pence said. The Kentucky State Police is Kentucky's primary law enforcement agency, Pence said. "What we do not need is another layer of law enforcement," Pence said. "We do need law enforcement personnel, but what we do not need is another agency." Gov. Ernie Fletcher created the Office of Drug Control Policy in August, which is responsible for coordinating the state's drug-fighting efforts. The new office will not interfere with ongoing efforts by the state police or the Justice Cabinet, Stumbo said. James said one of the department's first investigations would be into the recent negotiations that led to the state's controversial 2005 health insurance plan for public school district employees and state workers. The alleged involvement of a former insurance company executive in the negotiations that lead to the plan "certainly raises some concerns," James said. Fletcher spokesman Doug Hogan called the investigation "political grandstanding" and said there was nothing inappropriate about the negotiations. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek