Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jun 2006 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2006 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Greg Barnes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) EX-DEPUTIES DENIED BAIL IN THEFTS A federal judge ordered two former Robeson County deputies detained until they are tried on charges of stealing money seized in drug operations, threatening suspects and committing arson. The former deputies -- C.T. Strickland and Roger Taylor -- were named in a 10-count indictment that was unsealed Friday. A detention hearing for Steven Lovin, another former deputy also named in the indictment, was postponed until Monday. The detention hearing for Strickland and Taylor was held Wednesday at the federal courthouse in Fayetteville. Family members of Strickland and Taylor gasped and cried when U.S. District Judge James Gates announced that the two men would be detained because he considered them a flight risk and a potential danger to the community. Strickland and Taylor have been held in isolation from other prisoners since their arrests Friday morning. Officials would not say where they were being held. Their lawyers argued that they would be safer and better off if allowed to be free until trial. Strickland, 39, and Taylor, 36, are accused of wrongdoing while working as sheriff's deputies from 1995 until they left the department -- for different reasons -- in 2003. They were indicted by a grand jury after a 3 1/2-year state and federal investigation called Operation Tarnished Badge. In arguing for their detention, Assistant U.S. Attorney Wes Camden said hundreds of witnesses came forward with evidence against the deputies. He said one witness received three threatening telephone calls shortly after the deputies were arrested: "Bang, bang, you're dead," "You can run but you can't hide," and, "You won't never make it to trial to testify." Camden said the caller used a voice-altering device when making the calls. Before Gates ordered the men detained, Camden outlined the government's case against them. In 1997, Camden said, Strickland and Taylor were among deputies who used violence to remove people from the home of Hubert Ray Locklear, who is now a convicted drug dealer, and then burned the home to the ground. Lovin also participated in the arson, the indictment says. The next year, Camden said, Taylor conspired with others to burn Lewis Vernon's home and pawnshop. The home was occupied at the time. Camden said Taylor paid someone $1,600 for helping to burn the home and used about 25 pounds of marijuana as payment for burning the pawnshop. The 29-page indictment shows that Taylor faces six counts of distributing cocaine or marijuana. Strickland, Taylor and Lovin are accused of stealing tens of thousands of dollars from drug-operation seizures along Interstate 95. The three are accused of falsifying vouchers to steal the money. Strickland, who headed the sheriff's drug enforcement division, is accused of stealing $11,000 from Daniel Watts in a common-law robbery at Watts' home. The indictment says that Strickland threatened to harm Watts. Assistant U.S. Attorney Frank Bradsher said Strickland and Taylor could face life in prison if convicted. But Strickland's lawyer, James Parish, said Strickland faces a maximum of 20 years. Strickland is named in far fewer counts than Taylor. Parish and Taylor's lawyer, Joe Zeszotarski, argued that their clients are accused of alleged crimes that occurred years ago. Both have been working in the community since leaving the Sheriff's Office and are not flight risks, the lawyers said. Zeszotarski put Taylor's mother on the stand. Mary Taylor said her son was active in church and had worked since age 16 for the Lumberton Rescue Squad, once serving as its commander. Mary Taylor said her son was also a member of the N.C. Resuce Task Force and was among the first people to help Hurricane Katrina victims in New Orleans. She said he helped evacuate 200 people from a hospital. Strickland's wife, Paula, called her husband a hard worker. She said their daughter is getting married this weekend. A Taylor family friend and neighbor, Donna Barden, said she has known Roger Taylor all of his life. "He's just a good boy," Barden said after the hearing. "It's just not Roger to be that way." Training cited Judge Gates said he ordered the men detained until trial partly because their law enforcement training and experience increases their potential risk of flight and threat to the community. He said the gravity of the charges and the weight of the evidence also favored detention. Strickland resigned from the Sheriff's Office in June 2003 after he was accused of falsifying information used to get a search warrant and his credibility as a deputy came into question. Taylor and Detective James Jacobs were arrested on conspiracy and obstruction of justice charges in September 2003. The two were accused of allowing a convicted felon to carry a weapon during a sting operation and then trying to impede an SBI investigation into the incident. Taylor was the commander of the Sheriff's Office communications division at the time. He was awaiting trial on the charges when he was arrested Friday. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom