Pubdate: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) Copyright: 2006 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. Contact: http://www.knoxnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226 Author: J.J. Stambaugh DODGIN COULD SPEND LIFE IN PRISON Ex-Cocke Deputy To Be Sentenced Today; Family Says He Used To Be Good According to his relatives and friends, Larry Joe Dodgin was once an upright law enforcement officer and devoted father whose sense of right and wrong was twisted by the years he spent working at the Cocke County Sheriff's Department. To federal prosecutors, Dodgin is one of the most dangerous types of criminal: an officer willing to use his badge to steal, sell drugs and protect gangsters who wanted to use his community as a recruiting ground for corrupt cops. Whatever his motives, Dodgin could end up spending the rest of his life behind bars when he is sentenced today in federal court in Greeneville. It's more likely, however, that Dodgin will end up facing at most a decade in federal prison because of his cooperation in the five-year "Rose Thorn" probe into public corruption and organized crime in Cocke County. Dodgin, 27, was a veteran deputy when he was arrested 10 months ago for trying to buy $60,000 worth of cocaine from an undercover FBI agent. He later pleaded guilty to cocaine trafficking and possession of a firearm during a drug trafficking offense. He agreed to cooperate with authorities, and four other Sheriff's Department officers were later arrested on a slew of federal charges. One of them, former Chief Deputy Patrick Taylor, is expected to enter a guilty plea today along with his brother, Jarrod Taylor, to conspiring to traffic in stolen goods. The Taylor brothers are the nephews of longtime Sheriff D.C. Ramsey, who resigned early this year after it was disclosed that he and the Taylors had been targeted by the FBI because of allegations that they were connected to organized gambling operations. Because of Dodgin's assistance in the probe, federal prosecutors are asking that he receive a sentence of 87-108 months and undergo both substance-abuse and mental-health treatment while in prison. U.S. District Judge Ronnie Greer, however, has the authority to sentence him to the statutory maximum of 40 years on the cocaine charge and a life sentence on the gun charge. Although Dodgin has only been charged with two offenses, court records show that he became involved in a staggering array of criminal activities as the FBI focused on him in mid-2004 as part of an effort to root out corruption in Cocke County. In June of that year, Dodgin was introduced to an undercover FBI agent who was supposedly working for "an organization" that sold drugs, laundered money and dealt in stolen goods with the help of crooked cops in Chicago, records show. Dodgin took the bait and went on to guard a drug transaction in a grocery store parking lot in Newport, deliver crack cocaine, and protect tractor-trailers purportedly containing thousands of dollars worth of stolen merchandise that were parked in the county, records state. He also made several out-of-state trips to smuggle drug money for "the organization" and abused drugs himself while helping a friend, convicted cocaine dealer Jeremy Jones, stay out of trouble. Eventually, Dodgin brokered a deal between the purported gangsters and his boss, chief deputy Taylor, in which Taylor agreed to buy some of the stolen merchandise that Dodgin had been paid to protect. The Taylor brothers showed up to make the purchase on May 17, 2005, and Dodgin later split $2,500 with the FBI agent. While prosecutors are adamant about Dodgin going to prison, the former lawman has filed motions through his attorney, J. Russell Pryor, asking that he instead "be allowed to serve the remainder of his sentence in community confinement or home detention." Dodgin is the father of two young children and plans to marry his youngest child's mother "as soon as possible," wrote Pryor. Also, because of his status as a former cop, he "is a likely target for abuse in prison," Pryor said. "Given that law enforcement is essentially the only type of job (Dodgin) has ever had, (his) career has been ruined," Pryor said. "There has been a tremendous amount of negative publicity involving (his) conviction, which has caused harm to his family and destroyed his reputation in Newport - a very small town." At worst, Pryor maintains, Dodgin should receive a 51-month sentence. Several of Dodgin's relatives and acquaintances have also filed letters of support in which they plead for Greer to show mercy on the former lawman, who has been jailed without bond since his arrest. Dodgin's stepfather, Tennessee Highway Patrol Trooper Michael Holt, wrote that Dodgin wanted to "follow in my footsteps" and that "it was hard for my advice to overcome what he was seeing at the Cocke County Sheriff's Department." "He was always broke and borrowing money from me just to eat lunch or get by to payday," Holt wrote. "I can understand how large sums of easy money could be so tempting to him. His young sons need him in their lives and they miss him dearly." Holt then described several instances of alleged misconduct by other lawmen that he believes affected Dodgin, including a time when he was allegedly ordered by then-Sheriff Ramsey to drop a drug charge against a political supporter whom Dodgin had cited to court. Holt also said Dodgin arrested another man for DUI one night and Patrick Taylor "came out and physically removed the arrested individual from the back of the patrol car and released him" after the suspect called the chief deputy. "A sad thing is Joe was a good officer when he wanted to be," Holt wrote. "I really feel that, him being young, that it was easier for the system here to demoralize him and more or less make him feel (that) doing good and right was in vain." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek