Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jan 2004 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2004 Orlando Sentinel Contact: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325 Author: Alicia A. Caldwell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) LOSS OF EVIDENCE FORCES MANAGER'S SUSPENSION Employee Oversaw Locker That Held Missing Drugs DELAND -- The man in charge of the evidence locker from which nearly half a million dollars' worth of cocaine and marijuana disappeared was suspended by the Volusia County Sheriff's Office last week, officials said Wednesday. Tim Wallace, the civilian evidence manager, also was one of two employees reprimanded in October after evidence in two murder cases was misplaced because of "laziness" and "ineptness," records show. Gary Davidson, a sheriff's spokesman, said Wallace's suspension last week was part of an ongoing internal-affairs investigation. He would not discuss the nature of that investigation. Wallace is the only evidence-section employee who has been suspended, Davidson said. Wallace could not be reached for comment. A woman who answered the door at his New Smyrna Beach home Wednesday said, "He's not going to be speaking." Investigators have not named a suspect in the drug thefts, though they say an arrest is imminent and an internal investigation is under way. On Monday, sheriff's officials revealed that at least 370 pounds of marijuana and 859 grams -- about 1.89 pounds -- of cocaine were taken from the evidence compound during the past two years, putting at least four cases in jeopardy. Sheriff's investigators learned that the drugs were missing earlier this month after they went looking for evidence in a case in which 577 grams of cocaine are now missing. State prosecutors noticed in September that something was amiss with the drug evidence deputies purported to have gathered against Francisco Paco Mercado, 56. Mercado had been arrested in June and was charged in July with trafficking in cocaine -- 400 or more grams -- but the Florida Department of Law Enforcement testing lab only received about half of the 577 grams deputies said they seized. The State Attorney's Office reduced the charge against Mercado to a felony count of trafficking in cocaine -- 200 to 400 grams -- on Oct. 28, but sheriff's investigators didn't learn of the discrepancy until Jan. 8. They later found that all of the cocaine seized in that case was missing from the agency's evidence compound near DeLand. If convicted of the lesser charge, Mercado faces a mandatory minimum sentence of seven years in prison and a $100,000 fine. The more serious crime would have carried a mandatory 15-year minimum and $250,000 fine. The same day prosecutors reduced the charge against Mercado, the Sheriff's Office reprimanded Wallace and another employee for mishandling evidence in two other cases. On Oct. 28, Wallace, who had been promoted from evidence technician to manager in May, was given a written reprimand and was told he would be given an extra 90 days to complete the first part of a yearlong training program. He was required to complete that training to maintain his job and earn a raise from his current salary of about $27,000. According to the reprimand, Wallace knew in September that evidence from one of the murder cases was missing, but he only told a supervisor about the situation after being asked about it a few weeks later. The reprimand also shows that a sign-in log at the four-building compound near DeLand did not accurately show who had access to the evidence, among other problems at the facility that investigators said led to the evidence being misplaced. Deputy Steve Edwards, who also works in the evidence section, was reprimanded for not returning the misplaced evidence to the proper case files, records show. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin