Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 Source: Commercial Appeal (TN) Copyright: 2004 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://www.gomemphis.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 POLICE PROPERTY RULES REMAIN UNCLEAR Memphis police may have labored for three years under the false belief that a cancer in the department's property and evidence room had been conquered. Even today the prognosis is not clear. Officials of the department are reluctant to discuss the details of any changes that have been made since federal indictments were returned against five former or then-current civilian employees accused of stealing drugs and money late last year. Memphians would like to believe that the property room isn't being used as a major recycling bin for confiscated drugs and other property seized by the police, but new doubt has been cast on that prospect. According to Dennis Dycus, director of the municipal audit division in the state comptroller's office, a 1999 audit amounted to a scathing indictment of property room procedures. Responding to a similar investigation of the police department's Organized Crime Unit, auditors reported a litany of problems in the property room, including the lack of tags on evidence, open evidence packages and poor record keeping. They made specific recommendations about how to correct the problems. As evidence emerges in the case of former property room employee Kenneth Dansberry, however, it is clear that huge amounts of property were stolen from the room for more than three years after the critical report. The audit, it appears, was not treated with the sense of urgency that it deserved. A 12-page account of Dansberry's thefts of drugs and money, revealed in federal court, portrayed a distressing lack of institutional control after 1999 that allowed the $33,000-a-year civilian police department employee to live comfortably in a well-to-do Cordova neighborhood with a substantial collection of nice cars. Dansberry, who has not yet been sentenced, was indicted last fall following his arrest with more than $1 million in his possession. One of 16 people charged in the theft and distribution scheme, Dansberry pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiracy, money laundering and other financial crimes last week. His story is a familiar one to experts on the vulnerability of property rooms and the extraordinary steps that have to be taken to keep them secure. A longtime clerk who eventually rose to the position of shift supervisor, Dansberry had a family, a clean record and a winning personality. In 2000, a former employee of the property room allegedly recruited him to steal drugs, and before long he was handing off shipments of cocaine to collaborators from a loading dock. He allegedly gave $100,000 in payoff money to two property room employees, took the women on a $2,500 shopping spree and gave their husbands cash and tickets to an NBA all-star game. When he was finally caught, he told his story to investigators but couldn't remember how many times he had betrayed the trust that he had earned over two decades of service. The acts had become easy and routine. At one point he wheeled 200 pounds of marijuana out of an evidence room and sold it at the police impound lot. Perhaps no one should be surprised that some people placed in charge of vast amounts of drugs and other easily marketable property would be unable to resist temptation from time to time. But the scope of the Memphis Police Department case is stunning. And citizens are left to hope that more frequent audits, regular polygraph tests or other measures have been instituted to reinforce property room security. More information may be forthcoming when the results of a second audit conducted by Dycus's office in December are released. Police should be commended for bringing federal authorities into the investigation when it became clear that the property and evidence room had leaks. Confidence in the police department would get another boost if it could be reported that the room will never again become a major distribution center for confiscated drugs and other goods. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin