Pubdate: Mon, 12 Jun 2006 Source: Robesonian, The (Lumberton, NC) Copyright: 2006 The Robesonian Contact: http://www.robesonian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1548 Author: Scott Witten Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) LAWMEN PAINT UGLY PICTURE, STAY SILENT ON WHAT'S NEXT LUMBERTON - The accused were former Robeson County deputies, but when U.S. Attorney Frank Whitney read the federal charges, they sounded like the Sopranos. Whitney mentioned Cosa Nostra as he listed their alleged crimes - racketeering, arson, assault, theft, drug distribution and money laundering. Whitney declined to label Roger Hugh Taylor, Charles Thomas Strickland and Steven Ray Lovin as rogue cops, but the implication was clear. The 29-page federal grand jury indictment is less forgiving. It says the men used the Sheriff's Office for a decade to commit crimes for profit and power, using threats of physical violence and arson to make their point. "From a personal standpoint, I know all of them," District Attorney Johnson Britt said. "I have worked on cases with them. It is a very hard thing to accept in terms of what they are accused of. But in going back and reviewing what is alleged, we wouldn't be standing here if there wasn't evidence to support the allegations." Agents with the SBI and the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division and Highway Patrol officers arrested the former members of the Sheriff's Office Drug Enforcement Division on Friday. The press conference culminated years of rumors concerning alleged corruption at the Sheriff's Office "It is all very sad," Taylor's mother, Mary, said. "We knew this day might come, but it is still sad." Efforts by The Robesonian to reach family members of Strickland and Lovin were unsuccessful. The men appeared in U.S. District Court in Raleigh as Attorney General Roy Cooper joined other law enforcement brass at the Holiday Inn to detail the charges. A bond hearing for the three is next week. Each faces one count of racketeering; one count of conspiracy to commit racketeering; six counts of theft from programs receiving federal money; and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. The indictment says the crimes occurred from 1995 to 2004. The allegations include the use of marijuana as payment for committing arson, buying a Harley Davidson motorcycle with money from illegal activity and providing drugs to informants. Lovin alone is accused of stealing money during six highway stops on Interstate 95. Thousands of dollars were seized during those stops, Whitney said, but he would not give an exact amount. If found guilty, they could receive sentences of 10 years to life for racketeering, 10 years on each charge of theft from programs receiving federal money, and 20 years for conspiracy to launder money. Sue Berry, who is listed in court records as the attorney for all three, could not be reached. More Arrests? Law enforcement officials would not rule out additional indictments. "We can only say the investigation is continuing ... the standard U.S. government answer," said Whitney, who leads the Eastern District of the U.S. Attorney's Office. When asked if possible charges may involve Sheriff Glenn Maynor, the head of the department when the crimes allegedly occurred, Whitney gave a slight smile, but nothing more. "I can only talk about what is in the indictment ... I'm like Patrick Fitzgerald at the Scooter Libby press conference," he said. Maynor, who resigned at the end of 2004 while citing health concerns, could not be reached for comment. Leroy Freeman, a Maynor supporter, came to Friday's press conference, but he and about a dozen others were barred from the press conference that was for the media. Freeman listened in the hallway outside the hotel banquet room, and shook his head as he leafed through a copy of the indictments. Freeman was disappointed that Friday's press conference didn't put an end to years of speculation about corruption in the Sheriff's Office and Maynor's possible involvement. "This kind of thing happens ... unfortunately it had to happen here in a county that already has so many black eyes," Freeman said. "With the investigation continuing, there is still a dark cloud over us and rumors will continue because we don't know what else may come down or how deep any of this goes." Just the Latest The three-year investigation, Operation Tarnished Badge, is the latest bad news to hit a Sheriff's Office that has already seen a detective and another deputy case charged with kidnapping and robbery in what authorities said was a home invasion staged as a drug raid. In that case, two members of the Sheriff's Office were among six men charged with kidnapping and robbery in Maxton on May 14, 2004. Patrick Ferguson, a former deputy, was charged in April, and Vincent Sinclair, a former detective, was indicted in August. Authorities said the men joined civilians who posed as law officers in holding several people at gunpoint while the home was robbed, then kidnapped and beat a man before releasing him for a $150,000 ransom. Investigators say Ferguson, Sinclair and the others had previously kidnapped two drug dealers from Virginia Beach, Va. Even before Friday's charges were disclosed, Taylor, Strickland were forced to leave the Sheriff's Office. Strickland, who headed the drug investigation division, resigned in June 2003 after his credibility as an officer was questioned. In September 2002, Superior Court Judge Gregory Weeks threw out evidence in a drug case after learning that Strickland had falsified information to obtain a search warrant. Weeks ruled that Strickland knowingly provided false information to a magistrate to obtain the warrant. Strickland's law enforcement certification was revoked. Taylor was placed on leave in late 2003 after being charged with conspiracy and obstruction of justice in September 2003. In that case, he was accused of allowing a convicted felon to carry a weapon during a sting operation and trying to impede an SBI investigation. That case is pending. Agents searched the Drug Enforcement Division's office in March 2005 and seized documents and computers. Lovin left the Sheriff's Office in July of that year. Britt said he had to dismiss between 200 to 300 cases involving as many as 100 defendants because the former deputies were no longer credible. He said there is at least one case where an "individual was wrongfully convicted" and served time. He plans to ask a judge to vacate that sentence. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake