Pubdate: Wed, 14 Feb 2007 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2007 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayobserver.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 ROBESON COUNTY LEADERS MUST PROTECT RESIDENTS, RESTORE TRUST Rogue cops sully the reputation of the good ones who work hard to serve and protect. They sap morale from the officers who remain behind. They put the entire community in danger. In Robeson County, police malfeasance has created a public safety problem. Fifteen employees have left the Sheriff's Office in the eight months since federal officials announced Operation Tarnished Badge, a four-year corruption investigation. Eleven former deputies have been charged with a litany of crimes that include beating up drug dealers and stealing their money, paying informants with drugs that had been seized as evidence and filing false vouchers to steal federal drug-seizure funds. More recently, federal officials have targeted deputies' alleged involvement in the theft of satellite television signals and the sale of altered satellite cards used to receive the signals for free. And the investigation continues. Sources in the department say more charges are expected. Inside the department, sources report that morale is low and worsens as experienced officers resign, retire or are forced to leave. Robeson County residents should be worried about whether they are getting adequate protection from the officers left behind. The Sheriff's Office has hired 16 employees since June 9, the day state and federal officials announced Operation Tarnished Badge, but many lack experience. County Manager Ken Windley recently said it would be hard to replace the employees who left with years of experience. County leaders need to get busy trying to do it. But they can't just hire more people. Operation Tarnished Badge has been a public relations nightmare. To restore credibility in law enforcement, officials will need to initiate intensive ethics training for officers. The district attorney and the state Attorney General should help them. Officials also need to accelerate training for the new recruits, to put the best-trained deputies possible on the streets. And they need to create a system to monitor the deputies who are hired. Police need a mechanism to police themselves. That begins with creating an internal-affairs division. The Sheriff's Office is the only law enforcement agency in Robeson County without one. Leaders have a lot of work ahead of them. The effects of Operation Tarnished Badge will be far-reaching, but officials have a responsibility to reduce the effects that the debacle has had on residents. And they have to institute the kind of policy changes that will make it less likely for law-enforcement agencies to sink to this level again. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek