Pubdate: Tue, 02 Aug 2005
Source: News & Observer (Raleigh, NC)
Copyright: 2005 The News and Observer Publishing Company
Contact: https://miva.nando.com/contact_us/letter_editor.html
Website: http://www.news-observer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304
Author: Mandy Locke, Staff Writer

DRUG DEALER DOLLARS FIGHTING CRIME

The Money Will Fund A New Prosecutor In The Johnston District Attorney's Office

SMITHFIELD- Drug dealers will be footing the bill for the new Johnston 
County prosecutor hired to put them behind bars.

Johnston Sheriff Steve Bizzell funnelled $60,806 in seized drug money to 
District Attorney Tom Lock's office Monday for a prosecutor to help handle 
drug cases.

"The illegal drug trade continues to be the root of all crimes in our 
county," Bizzell said at a news conference.

Over the past four years, the Johnston County Sheriff's Department seized 
about $1.7 million in cash and property tied to drug trafficking. Already, 
state and federal authorities funnelled almost $700,000 of that back to the 
sheriff's department, said Bizzell. His department has used portions of the 
money to buy computer equipment for cruisers and gear such as bulletproof 
vests for deputies.

The new prosecutor will help Ann Kirby, the lone drug prosecutor for 
Johnston County, tackle a growing load of drug cases. Forty percent of 
Johnston County's 350 felony cases last year were drug-related.

Delays in prosecuting drug cases in Johnston County are due in part to a 
backlog of drug cases being processed at the State Bureau of Investigation 
Crime Lab. The new prosecutor won't eliminate those delays, but Lock said 
he hopes the extra help will change the way his office handles drug cases.

"We hope to be able to bring more of these cases to trial," said Lock, 
noting that many of these cases are settled through negotiated pleas for 
the sake of time and efficiency. "We'll get to deal with them on our own 
terms and press for active jail time."

The new drug prosecutor, Patrick Roberts, started Monday. Roberts, a 2000 
graduate of Duke University School of Law, was most recently an assistant 
district attorney in Wilmington. The $60,806 will cover his salary and 
benefits for one year. Lock hopes to find resources to hire Roberts 
full-time after the first year.

Local prosecutors are paid through the North Carolina Administrative Office 
of the Courts, which receives money from the General Assembly each year. 
The Administrative Office of the Courts has asked for 75 new assistant 
district attorney positions across the state next year, but the state 
legislature is expected to approve only four, Lock said.

"We are just dying out here in the trenches," he said. 
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