Pubdate: Fri, 20 Feb 2004 Source: Commercial Appeal (TN) Copyright: 2004 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://www.gomemphis.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 Author: Chris Conley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) PRECINCT COMMANDER TARGET OF PROBE Suspension Comes After Questioning On Thefts From MPD Evidence Room Federal investigators probing thefts of drugs and money from the Memphis Police Department property and evidence room have turned their attention to a police commander, officials said Thursday. Insp. J. D. King, who until 11 a.m. Thursday was commander of the department's North Precinct, is the target of a criminal investigation into the mishandling of evidence at the facility, according to a statement from Police Director James Bolden. King was relieved of duty with pay pending the outcome of the investigation. He was questioned at the North Precinct on Thursday morning. The investigation is being led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service, the Drug Enforcement Administration and Memphis police. "This is part of our continuing efforts to maintain our standards of integrity and ethical behavior" within the department, Bolden said in a written statement. "Great strides have been taken to bring integrity to the department, and part of that includes the prevention of public corruption," he said. Insp. Joseph Laurenzi, a 36-year veteran of the department, will replace King as North Precinct commander. Agents familiar with the case said at least two search warrants were executed Wednesday in connection with the case, one to a business. It was not known if evidence was obtained. King, a 25-year-veteran of the department, was the major in command of the property and evidence room and the supply room from 1998 to 2000. The scandal broke in September when 16 people, including Police Department civilian employees, were named in federal grand jury indictments linking thefts from the property and evidence room to an Atlanta-based cocaine ring. The indictments allege theft in the property and evidence room from early 2002 to September 2003. The thefts came after a 1999 audit that found lax security and sloppy controls. The audit came in response to a corruption scandal in the department's Organized Crime Unit. At the time, police officials promised to reform the way evidence was kept and safeguarded. More than three years after that blistering audit, the facility remained vulnerable to thieves. A new audit was requested by the department early last year when allegations of thefts surfaced. A final report from state auditors is due within weeks. Statements to investigators by a key player in the corruption, Kenneth W. Dansberry, brought the thefts to light. He pleaded guilty in federal court last month to an array of drug conspiracy and money laundering charges. Dansberry, the civilian day-to-day supervisor of the property and evidence room from 2000 to last September, admitted in court to stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars in money and drugs from the room. He told investigators he stole cocaine, marijuana and money "so many times (that) I don't remember." He told investigators that he once sold a 10-kilogram load of cocaine to an accused drug dealer off the loading dock under the Shelby County Jail. The drugs were slated to be destroyed, but were instead diverted by Dansberry. Dansberry told investigators that he paid two other employees of the property and evidence room $100,000 in hush money. Those two employees, along with an employee from the supply room, await trial. Dansberry said he provided drugs to a former civilian police department employee. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin