Pubdate: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2006 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Greg Barnes CORRUPTION SURROUNDS EX-SHERIFF'S TENURE The day Glenn Maynor became Robeson County's sheriff, he fired back at people who had circulated rumors about drug money fueling his campaign. "I immensely dislike drug dealers," Maynor said that December day a dozen years ago. "And to my knowledge, no drug dealer supported me." Today, Maynor's legacy lies in tatters because of a four-year investigation that has exposed his deputies' involvement with drug dealers. Twelve deputies have been charged with colluding with drug dealers, burning homes, kidnapping dealers and stealing money from traffic stops of couriers along Interstate 95. Maynor resigned in December 2004 -- citing health reasons -- just as the investigation known as Operation Tarnished Badge started to heat up. Since then, Maynor has kept a low profile, attending weddings, funerals, a few political functions and an occasional luncheon with political allies. Friends say he often works out at a fitness center to strengthen his ailing heart, but otherwise keeps largely to himself. Maynor has not been charged, but the investigation continues. He has declined to talk about the investigation or about the deputies involved. It is a far cry from the high hopes of 1994, when voters elected Maynor, the only Lumbee Indian to hold Robeson County's most powerful and influential political post. Throughout its history, race has been the county's great divider. Almost an equal number of blacks, whites and Indians live in Robeson, creating a progress-blocking battle for political control. Robeson ranks high in poverty and unemployment, crime and drugs, teenage pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. Schools contend with low test scores and a high dropout rate. Maynor was seen as a man who could galvanize the three races and make them work for a common goal -- a better Robeson County. In many ways, Maynor did just that. Each race should be treated fairly and equally, he said during his campaign, and one of his first acts was to put a black, a white and an Indian in his top command positions. He was -- many of his friends and supporters say -- a man for all people. "No one else could have handled the transition as well or created as good a feeling as Glenn Maynor," said Dickson McLean, a Lumberton lawyer who once served as the county's Democratic Party chairman. But a dozen years after his election -- after every member of his Drug Enforcement Division has been charged with a crime -- people wonder: What price did they pay for the hope of unity? Glenn Maynor graduated from Lumberton's Magnolia High School in 1965. He spent a year working for Burlington Industries and another year at Converse before then-Councilman W.R. Hester helped him get a job at the Lumberton Police Department. After a year as a dispatcher, Maynor became the first Indian officer on the police force when he was promoted to patrol officer. He left the force in 1973 to become driver's license examiner. Two years later, he was elected to the City Council. By then, he told a reporter in 1998, he had begun to set his sights on the Sheriff's Office. "When I was a police officer, I witnessed deputies treating people wrongly," Maynor told the reporter. "Sometimes it would be verbal abuse, sometimes it was physical abuse, and they got away with it. "I thought, 'Why doesn't somebody do somethingUKP' Then I realized, I was somebody." Maynor had just been elected to a second term as sheriff when he made those statements. By then, corruption had already begun to creep into his department, a federal indictment of three former deputies shows. Among many other offenses, the indictment accuses the deputies of beating up people suspected of dealing drugs. Lumberton Mayor Ray Pennington said he and many others don't believe Maynor knew what his deputies were doing. "I certainly don't place blame on him," said Pennington, who considers Maynor a close friend. "I'm sure he is as disappointed as anyone. "Certainly, in my mind, he would not have condoned it or been involved in it." At this point in the investigation, the harshest criticism of Maynor has come from Johnson Britt, Robeson County's district attorney. Britt, who declined to comment for this story, has said previously that investigators were looking into whether Maynor allowed on-duty deputies to landscape his yard and work at his golf tournament to raise campaign funds. Since then, three former deputies have pleaded guilty to accepting money to help landscape a former elected official's yard and work at his golf tournament while on duty. Federal prosecutors won't name the former elected official or say whether Maynor is under investigation. No love has been lost between Britt and Maynor over the years. Britt has said he doesn't know whether Maynor was aware of his deputies' wrongdoing. But if he didn't know, Britt has said, he should have. Glenn Maynor's first attempt at becoming Robeson County's sheriff went down in defeat in 1990. Maynor faced Sheriff Hubert Stone, a charismatic Democrat who had held the office for 12 years. During many of those years, rumors of corruption ran rampant. Two years before the election, Indian activists Eddie Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs took hostages at The Robesonian newspaper at gunpoint in an effort to expose the alleged corruption. A state investigation that followed failed to uncover any wrongdoing. Fueled in part by the takeover, Maynor's campaign platform against Stone was simple and effective: It's time for a change. Stone beat Maynor by a scant 2 percent of the vote. Voters cast their ballots along racial lines, with Stone capturing the white Lumberton voters and Maynor sweeping the Indian vote in Pembroke. Four years later, Stone decided to step down, leaving the door open for Maynor. Maynor again left his job as director of the Robeson Housing Authority to seek election. He beat Lum Edwards in a tight primary runoff, capturing about 90 percent of the Lumbee vote. He then beat James Sanderson in the November general election. Maynor won by turning to political methods used to get out the vote in the 1950s. His supporters shouted his message from megaphones in Indian neighborhoods and gave away hot dogs at polls in Indian-leaning precincts. Supporters say Maynor is a master at campaigning, a man who knows how to work a room like few others. "Everybody who got to know him liked him and wanted to see him do well," said Leroy Freeman, who helped orchestrate Maynor's campaigns. "He never met a stranger. He just knew how to make people feel that they were important." On the rare occasions when Maynor forgot someone's name, Freeman said, he would greet him with, "My friend, my friend. So good to see you." After the person walked away, Maynor would lean over and ask somebody for his name. "Then he had their name and he wouldn't forget it," Freeman said. A month after winning the 1994 election, Maynor addressed about 700 supporters outside the Robeson County Courthouse. The late Superior Court Judge Dexter Brooks administered the oath to Maynor, who then spoke to the crowd about what he hoped his legacy would hold: "I want to be remembered in history as the sheriff that united this county racially and brought it together," he said. Maynor turned to look at about 30 deputies standing behind him and said: "If I think or hear of any evidence that they're taking any kind of bribe, I'll fire them." Immediately following the swearing-in ceremony, Maynor told a reporter that he would not retain 14 deputies who had worked for Stone. Among them was Erich Hackney, Stone's head of the Drug Enforcement Division. Hackney, now a Lumberton councilman, said he holds no ill-will against Maynor. He just thinks the sheriff made a big mistake. "If I was still over the drug unit, I feel Glenn Maynor would still be the sheriff," Hackney said. "We ran a good ship. One of the last things I did was balance those books. I hate that things fell apart." Hackney was replaced by Mark Locklear, chief of detectives under Stone. Maynor chose Willie Watson, a 17-year sheriff's veteran, as his chief deputy and former Lumberton police officer Jesse Britt as his chief of operations. By doing so, Maynor fulfilled his promise to put an Indian, a black and a white into the department's top positions. Locklear said he didn't agree with Maynor's decision to fire the 14 deputies who had worked under Stone. Locklear said he thought the decision cost the county too much experience. But he agreed with many of Maynor's other early decisions, especially the one to create a major crimes division. Maynor also made good on a campaign promise to put satellite sheriff's offices in strategic areas of the county. "Things were positive" back then, Locklear said. Four years after the first election, voters thought Maynor did such a good job that they picked him by nearly a 3-1 margin over his old nemesis -- Hubert Stone. Two weeks after the 1998 election, Maynor fired Locklear without warning or stating a reason. "He called me on the phone and said that my services were no longer needed, that things would not work out between us," Locklear said. "In short, his politics clashed with my law enforcement. "He was just like he campaigned, an effective administrator but he lacked the law enforcement savvy that was needed to be aware of what his officers were doing on a daily basis." Two of those deputies -- Steven Lovin and C.T. Strickland -- worked directly under Locklear in the Drug Enforcement Division. "I never had any problems with them while they were under my supervision," Locklear said. "They went beyond the call of duty. What happened after my departure, I don't know." State and federal investigators say they think they know. Strickland, Lovin and another former drug unit member, Roger Taylor, have been indicted. The indictment accuses Lovin of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from drug seizures on Interstate 95. Strickland, who headed the drug unit, is accused of intimidating suspected drug dealers and stealing money seized in drug operations. Taylor is accused of burning down a man's home and pawnshop and with providing drugs to informants. The deputies were arrested June 9, about 18 months after Maynor resigned and more than three years after Operation Tarnished Badge began. Since that day, seven other former Robeson County deputies have been charged. All seven have pleaded guilty and have agreed to testify against Strickland, Lovin and Taylor, whose trial is set for March. Another former deputy, Vincent Sinclair, was charged in May 2005 with kidnapping drug dealers. The investigation has taken a turn recently, leading to the new charges of satellite television piracy against Strickland, Lovin and Taylor and a guilty plea for that offense from Deputy Gary Odum. Charges against other deputies are expected. Pennington, the Lumberton mayor, said the bad publicity has made it hard to recruit new businesses to Lumberton and Robeson County. Freeman, Maynor's friend and political strategist, called it "a black eye" for the county and its honest law enforcers. "All three races are facing indictments. It's not a Lumbee thing. It hurts all of us. It's devastating." Freeman questions why it has taken so long to bring the investigation to a close. Some people speculate that investigators are still trying to connect Maynor to the corrupt deputies. Freeman thinks that's unfair. "I know Glenn's a good man," he said. "I know he tried to do a good job. It's obvious they are trying to look and trying to find any penny-ante thing and make it into a mountain." The U.S. Attorney's Office and the Internal Revenue Service won't say what is taking so long. Officials from both agencies have refused to talk about the case since Taylor, Strickland and Lovin were arrested. Maynor's detractors are hesitant to speak out, as well. Some, such as Locklear, fear a political backlash. Locklear lost his bid for sheriff this year but still has political ambitions. "I'd cut my throat for the future," he said. Like many, Locklear said, he doesn't know whether Maynor was aware of what his deputies were doing. But he thinks it's possible that Maynor didn't know about the corruption. "Glenn hadn't been in the trenches, hadn't worked investigations, didn't have grassroots knowledge, so he wasn't able to know what to look for as to whether his employees were providing effective service," Locklear said. Freeman also won't say publicly whether he thinks Maynor will escape criminal charges. Only one thing, Freeman said, is certain. "We just want it over," he said. "The county wants it over. It should have been over a long time ago. That's the sentiment of a lot of people. Why are they dragging it out?" - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine