Pubdate: Wed, 07 Dec 2005 Source: Centre Daily Times (PA) Copyright: 2005 Nittany Printing and Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://www.centredaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/74 STATE COLLEGE OFFICERS KEEP CLOSE EYE ON CONFISCATIONS STATE COLLEGE -- The statue of a saint sits high atop a shelf in the corner of State College police's evidence and property room, his eyes cast upward. Nearby, more than a dozen cases of beer and enough bottles of liquor to keep even the busiest downtown bar in business through spring rest on a set of shelves. A refrigerator packed with DNA samples and rape kits sits in one corner. Two framed photo collages taken from fraternity houses are propped against the wall. A paper bag sealed with red tape, according to its tag, holds items taken from an apartment -- a comforter and a package of condoms that police hope will hold some clue about a reported sexual assault. Nearby, another sealed paper bag's tag says it holds clothing worn by a man who pleaded guilty to murder charges late last year. The keeper of the room, certified evidence and property specialist Cpl. Rick Ososkie, surveys the orderly chaos with a good-natured smile. "Basically, it's a storage room," he said. "It's not unlike a Wal-Mart warehouse." The importance of organized, secure evidence storage came into the national spotlight during the O.J. Simpson trial in 1995, Ososkie said, when defense lawyers hammered away at the reliability of the evidence. Troubling, too, are incidents around the country where police officers and officials are caught stealing from the room, or when outsiders break in to take items, Ososkie said. The evidence room at the police department was designed to eliminate the possibility that evidence can be left unattended and unsecure, Ososkie said. In the hallway wall near the evidence room is a wall of lockers, their doors ajar. When a police officer has evidence or property to put in the room, he or she puts it in an open locker and shuts the door. Then, no one can access it until Ososkie or one of the other evidence room keyholders comes in and accesses the lockers through a padlocked door inside the room itself. "When something comes in, it's logged and assigned a position," Ososkie said. "Each time it leaves or comes back, it's documented." Within the evidence room, there's another locked room marked with the logo for Miller Genuine Draft beer, a playful way to note what's actually kept there: Money, guns and drugs. The smell of marijuana -- seized by police during an ongoing drug investigation -- permeates the small, windowless room. Paper bags and manila envelopes line the shelves. A rack of shotguns takes up most of one wall, and a file cabinet opposite them is stuffed with drugs and weapons scheduled to be destroyed. Ososkie goes through one of the file drawers carefully, pulling out a dagger, a leaded sap and a Derringer smaller than the palm of his hand. Some of the items in this room have been set aside for display, although the police department does not have place for that yet. Others have been marked for destruction, Ososkie said. "Drugs gets burned, and guns get melted," Ososkie said. "The booze is poured down the sink." But property is a different story. Found items are usually kept in the room for at least 30 days, Ososkie said, while police attempt to locate and notify the owner. From there, the items are either thrown away or sent to auction. Any money made at auction goes into the borough's budget. But cash and more valuable items, like jewelry, must be turned over to the state, Ososkie said. When officers confiscate kegs from parties and return them to the distributor, the refund money must also be sent to the state. As he shows two visitors around the room, he points out some of the odder items -- homemade potato guns, a leopard-spotted marijuana bong and a very expensive-looking bicycle. "Most of the bikes we find are stored at the impound lot," he said. "But this one is almost new and very expensive. I'd like to find the owner, but we haven't been able to. If we can't, we'll probably sell it on eBay, because we won't get anything for it at an auction." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman