Pubdate: Fri, 25 Mar 2005 Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) Copyright: 2005 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. Contact: http://www.knoxnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226 Author: Jamie Satterfield Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) MORGAN SHERIFF DEFENDS AGENCY Department's Handling Of Drugs Criticized By DA Morgan County Sheriff Bobby Gibson on Thursday issued a written statement defending his agency's handling of drug evidence in the wake of a Tennessee Bureau of Investigation probe. In the statement, Gibson said he had a policy on how drug evidence was to be handled, but things did not always go according to plan. "It has always been the policy of this department to secure drugs and evidence in the main vault as quickly as possible," Gibson wrote. "There are times in most departments when no one is there to accept the evidence. Then, officers secure it in their trunks until it can be turned in." Gibson did not address the six bags of suspected methamphetamine that are missing from his agency's evidence room or allegations that other drugs remain unaccounted for. Ninth Judicial District Attorney General Scott McCluen has said a TBI probe he ordered in January revealed that six bags of what field-tested positive for methamphetamine were missing from Gibson's evidence room. Other drugs listed by deputies as seized in various cases could not be located, McCluen said. In an interview, McCluen said evidence handling at the Morgan County Sheriff's Department was so "bad" that it would be next to impossible to either prove or rule out theft of the missing drugs. McCluen said he has been forced to dismiss charges in the meth case. Other cases also are at risk as a result of drug evidence handling problems, he said. He described incidents in which seized drugs were stowed in patrol cars for months at a time and even stashed behind file cabinets. Gibson said in his written release that the state of his agency's evidence handling procedures was not as bad as McCluen indicated. He attributed some problems to limited space. "Part of the problem came from our previous office location not having a place to put in a temporary holding box," the sheriff wrote. "In our new location, there is space available for that." Gibson also said there was nothing suspicious about an explanation given to the TBI for some missing powder believed to be meth. The TBI was told that the powder at issue was found among suspected meth lab equipment and had been turned over to a hazardous materials clean-up crew. "A lot of this evidence came from early in the meth lab era, and there were many questions about what was hazardous and how dangerous it was to handle," Gibson wrote. He did not say, however, whether someone was charged with possessing that powder. If charges were filed, that substance would become evidence subject to testing by both prosecutors and defense attorneys. "The Morgan County Sheriff's Department takes the security of all evidence very seriously," Gibson wrote. "There has been a few procedures changed with regard to this investigation, but we have managed to keep thousands of pieces of evidence and records secure for many years and will continue to do so in the future." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin