Pubdate: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2007 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayobserver.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: John Fuquay Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Operation+Tarnished+Badge Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?246 (Policing - United States) ROBESON DEPUTIES GOING TO PRISON RALEIGH -- A federal judge sentenced two former Robeson County sheriff's deputies to maximum terms Thursday and told a third to expect more than the recommended sentence. U.S. District Judge Terrence Boyle sentenced Paul Pittman and Billy Hunt to six months in prison. The two did personal work for former Robeson County Sheriff Glenn Maynor at his home and for his campaign while being paid for working as deputies. Pittman and Hunt faced a maximum five years in prison but the federal probation office recommended punishment ranging from probation to six months they cooperated in the investigation known as Operation Tarnished Badge. The five-year investigation has implicated 20 former Robeson County lawmen, including Maynor. The former sheriff pleaded guilty to perjury and conspiring to misapply federal money. Besides sentencing Pittman and Hunt, Boyle considered the sentence for a third former deputy, Joey Smith. In that case, Boyle delayed sentencing after scolding a federal prosecutor for his willingness to accept what Boyle considered a light penalty. Smith pleaded guilty to misappropriating about $4,000 from a federal drug fund and faces a maximum 20-year sentence. Prosecutors said Smith made arrangements with a supervisor to repay the money. Boyle recalled hundreds of bank tellers and estate lawyers who stole money without paying it back. "Everybody says, "Well, I'm going to give it back. I just needed it right now,'" Boyle said. "That's an insult to this investigation. You might as well have stayed home. That's like saying Robeson County is not in the jurisdiction of the United States. ... To say, 'Well, you get a couple of years to be good,' that's an insult to the public." Boyle said Smith was part of a conspiracy that caused a loss of $70,000 in federal funds. The money was from cash and property seized during drug arrests. The judge criticized the recommendations of a presentencing report for Smith. "Why did you not take into account the financial value of the loss?" Boyle asked. "It's a conspiracy. It alleges for a long period of time people were accessing illegally the use of federal funds. ... This report is one-sided and not representative of the facts of the case." Boyle told Smith he was not going to give him probation and intended to exceed the recommended maximum sentence. Smith and his lawyer accepted Boyle's offer to reschedule his sentencing so he could prepare a response to Boyle's sentencing. Both Pittman and Hunt apologized for their crimes, and their lawyers asked for probation. "Paul (Pittman) was part of a corrupt administration," said his lawyer, Nardine Guirguis. "I am specifically speaking about Sheriff Maynor and his (Pittman's) supervisor, Mr. (C.T.) Strickland, who instructed him to do the work at Mr. Maynor's home." Assistant U.S. Attorney Wes Camden said Pittman and Hunt did landscaping work at Maynor's house and worked on campaign fundraising events such as a golf tournament and barbecue while being paid to work as deputies. It was a federal crime because the Sheriff's Office gets federal funding. Boyle rejected the requests for probation. "These were people who were supposed to be the law," he said. "They're either actively or passively watching the law being broken by themselves, then they come in here after the fact and say, 'Well, everybody else was doing it.' A courageous person would have arrested the sheriff." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake