Pubdate: Tue, 25 May 2004 Source: Jackson Sun News (TN) Copyright: 2004 The Jackson Sun Contact: http://www.jacksonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1482 Author: Tonya Smith-King DYER - BOARD ACCEPTS DRUG OFFICER'S RESIGNATION DYER - Drug officer John Grogan withdrew an original resignation letter at a meeting Monday and allowed aldermen to act on a second letter he'd given to the city's police committee chairman. There was concern among aldermen at a 6:30 p.m. police committee meeting that the initial letter contained some possibly slanderous material. The board accepted Grogan's resignation from the Dyer Police Department, effective May 30, based on the second letter. Grogan indicated in the second letter, which Police Committee Chairman Robert Johnson read during the meeting, that he'd resigned because of differences with Chief Scott Deaver over department polices - differences Grogan didn't believe could ever be resolved. Grogan told The Jackson Sun in an interview last week about two separate incidents of drug evidence stolen from the Dyer Police Department this year. Police believe inmate trusties working around the department took the drugs in both cases. Grogan said his problem was that there was no required internal paperwork in the form of a complaint on either incident and no indication of any investigation on either, he said. Deaver denied that. Deaver initially confirmed an ongoing investigation into a March incident of missing drug evidence but did not acknowledge an earlier February incident until after Grogan brought it to The Jackson Sun's attention. Deaver has said there was an ongoing investigation into the March incident jointly with the Gibson County Sheriff's Department. He later said the February incident also was part of that investigation. Grogan left the meeting, taking his original letter of resignation with him, after the board approved his resignation. His initial letter was partially a complaint, he said. He withdrew it on the advice of his attorney, Mark Agee of Trenton. ''I think it's in my best interest to turn in a general letter of resignation,'' Grogan said, adding he didn't want anything he said to come back to ''haunt'' him and cause him problems in the future. ''It was a disagreement with the chief over city policy ...'' Grogan said. ''As far as I'm concerned, I've notified the proper authorities. Whatever they choose to do is their business ... I'm no longer a member of the Dyer Police Department.'' He said there was nothing in the original letter that he hadn't already talked about with The Jackson Sun and declined to reveal the letter. Johnson said there would be no investigation by the police committee into the complaints Grogan said he made in the original letter. Johnson made it clear following the meeting that Grogan resigned, ''not because of the drug investigation that's ongoing,'' but because of ''differences he had with the chief of police.'' ''John's a good officer, and I don't want that hanging over his head,'' Johnson said. Aldermen who attended the police committee meeting indicated during the meeting that they had not received copies of Grogan's original letter of resignation. They didn't seem to want to know what it said or to have it read aloud during the 7 p.m. meeting. Alderwoman Cissy Halford indicated during the meeting that she believed there were some things board members didn't need to know. Asked about that after the meeting, she said she didn't want to see the letter because Grogan didn't want them to. ''He's been a good police officer,'' Halford said. ''He's worked well with the city. If he didn't want me to see the letter, I didn't want to read it.'' There were questions to the board's attorney, Bill Barron, during the police committee meeting such as whether aldermen had to act on both letters or only the second letter, and whether the original or the second was part of the city's official records. Barron said if Grogan didn't pick up the first letter, aldermen would have to act on them both. The original letter would also be part of the city's records, and thus available to the public if anyone requested to see it. ''If he doesn't get it before we start, then it will be a part of our government record,'' Barron told the board. Johnson had said he would bring up the resignation during the police report portion of the meeting. Grogan arrived at the meeting shortly after it had already started at 7 p.m. Later, Johnson had started to give the police report when he was stopped, and Barron was allowed to ask Grogan if he wanted to take back his original letter. Grogan said he did and came up to get it. Barron was asked after the meeting why the original letter was not part of the city records as he had said it would be if Grogan didn't pick it up before the meeting started at 7 p.m. He said he meant it would be part of their records if he didn't get it before the police report. But it was pointed out that Johnson had started to speak to give the report when he was stopped. ''I don't know what he was going to say,'' Barron said. ''As the attorney, I felt it was part of my duty to see that the meeting is conducted and stays in the perimeter of what we're talking about ... I was only interested in his resignation.'' He said he wasn't interested in the controversial material it contained and added that he had not seen the letter. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin