Pubdate: Thu, 01 Jun 2006 Source: Plain Dealer, The (Cleveland, OH) Copyright: 2006 The Plain Dealer Contact: http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/342 Note: priority given to local letter writers Author: Karen Farkas Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) SHERIFF BLAMES SLOPPY WORK IN BOTCHED CAMPUS DRUG CASE Akron -- The Summit County Drug Unit will be more closely supervised and work under tightened procedures, Sheriff Drew Alexander said Wednesday, after an investigation of a 2004 undercover operation at the University of Akron. The office reviewed the case of Charles Plinton, 25, a graduate student who was arrested and charged with selling marijuana. A jury acquitted him in August 2004. Plinton was suspended from school for a semester but never returned. He committed suicide last December. Alexander said the unit did not follow departmental policies. He said Plinton's case showed that every investigation is important, whether it involves a minor marijuana sale or a major operation. "Bottom line, we did sloppy police work," he said. "There is nothing I can do to go back and fix that case, but I can make sure it never happens again." Alexander said he still believes enough probable cause existed to indict Plinton, who had an alibi for the times he was accused of selling marijuana. "The way it was presented at trial, it was sloppy, and I don't blame any jury for finding him not guilty," Alexander said. "The system worked." A University of Akron police officer, who was also a member of the drug unit, suggested doing a drug investigation on campus, according to the report, prepared by Sheriff's Inspector Keith Thornton. More than 200 campus complaints had been received between January 2001 and February 2004. After attempts by undercover officers and off-campus informants were unsuccessful, an undercover drug informant - who had made buys for the drug unit since October 2003 - was placed in a dorm room in February 2004, the report said. The university police officer supervised him. The informant, wearing a transmitter, paid a total of $90 to buy marijuana from a man named Mark on March 3 and 11. The officer witnessed the purchases. But neither was able to identify Mark from photos of men who had been arrested before. The informant later provided a video from a nearby dormitory, and the men agreed that Mark was Plinton. A University of Akron sergeant, who said Plinton told him after he was arrested on April 24 that he was selling marijuana for a friend, did not type up or submit his report until July 28, a week before Plinton's trial. The sheriff's report released Wednesday says that reports on the drug buys and the attempts to identify Mark lacked detail and credibility. The quality of the recordings was poor. As part of the reforms, all drug cases will be reviewed regularly by supervisors. The Sheriff's Office will buy better digital recording devices, and everyone involved in an undercover operation will fill out reports. "Rules and regulations are your Bible in police work," Alexander said. "We can't take shortcuts." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman