Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jun 2006 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2006 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) ROBESON CORRUPTION PROBE MUST ROOT OUT THE ROT Robeson County District Attorney Johnson Britt says it's time for some healing. That may not be possible with wounds so fresh, and the possibility of more to come. But the county has to try. A 3 1/2-year state and federal investigation of Robeson County law enforcement -- and especially the Drug Enforcement Division of the county sheriff's office -- has resulted in charges against six sheriff's deputies and two Lumberton police officers so far. Officials say the investigation, called Operation Tarnished Badge, is continuing and more arrests are likely. It is another blow to a county that long has staggered under terrible burdens of poverty, racial problems, unrelenting violent crime and political corruption. Because of the charges, DA Britt says, he'll have to drop more than 300 drug cases. It is a law-enforcement nightmare. The latest charges came on June 9 in a 29-page federal indictment against three former drug cops who are charged with a litany of crimes that includes theft of tens of thousands of dollars from drug dealers and firebombing homes. The deputies were also charged with paying informants with drugs that had been seized as evidence, and with filing false vouchers to steal federal drug-seizure funds. Since the investigation began, police officers have faced charges including kidnapping, conspiracy, obstruction of justice, tampering with a witness, making false statements to the FBI, robbery, racketeering and arson. Many of the charges stem from former Sheriff Glenn Maynor's decade in office, from 1994 until 2004, when he resigned, citing health problems. Britt says Maynor isn't a suspect, but it's clear that neither Maynor nor current Sheriff Kenneth Sealey adequately supervised their drug unit. Drug deputies report directly to the sheriff and work out of an adjoining office. Before the healing can be complete, all of the rot must be carved out of the county's law-enforcement agencies and new protections must be added to make sure it doesn't recur. The job begins in the Sheriff's Office, which, incredibly, has no internal-affairs division. Nobody is policing the police. That has to change. The indictments are charges, of course, not convictions. The courts will have to hear the evidence and issue verdicts before this story is done. Meanwhile, the DA says, "As a county, we are going to have to come together to improve our self-image. ... One way of improving that image is to go to work and go to work hard, and show your commitment to the community." That's a big challenge for Sheriff Sealey. He needs to prove, quickly, that he's up to it. If he isn't, he needs to step aside. Completion of a thorough investigation is likely to show that most of Robeson County's law-enforcement officers are good people and capable cops. A probe like this, unfortunately, casts a pall over every cop in town. The good ones should hold their heads high and continue to do a good job. They need to stand up and make it clear, at every level, that they won't tolerate corruption in their midst any longer. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake