Pubdate: Mon, 16 Jun 2008 Source: News & Observer (Raleigh, NC) Copyright: 2008 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.newsobserver.com/484/story/433256.html Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Martha Quillin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) ROBESON CLOSES DOOR ON POLICE CORRUPTION LUMBERTON - One after another, 22 former members of the Robeson County Sheriff's Office have been hauled into federal court over the past six years to answer to charges that they abused their powers. As the last defendant -- the former sheriff himself -- awaits sentencing this week, the people he once served say they, too, have been punished as the case dragged on. With each allegation, each guilty plea and each sentencing, the words "corruption" and "Robeson County" made the rounds again in newspapers and television broadcasts. Kidnapping. Money laundering. Racketeering. Distribution of cocaine. Theft of federal funds. Satellite TV piracy. "Every time things kind of settled down, there'd be something else," county manager Kenneth Windley said. "And the judge is making an example of these guys, sentencing them to more than what the prosecution even asked for. I know some folks here question: If this was another county, would these things apply?" Windley had two other job offers on the table when he chose to come to Robeson County five years ago. He knew the FBI and the State Bureau of Investigation had been looking into problems at the sheriff's department. He knew Robeson was one of the largest counties in North Carolina, and one of the poorest, with the one of the highest high school dropout rates. He knew that the racial groups -- white, black and American Indian -- that make up almost equal parts of the population of 130,000 often didn't get along. Windley saw all that, he said, but also"a lot of potential." What others have seen in Robeson is a lot of corruption. Charges of corruption in Robeson became national news in 1988 when Eddie Hatcher and a friend stormed the office of the local newspaper, The Robesonian, brandishing sawed-off shotguns and claiming to have a bomb. They chained the doors and held up to 14 people hostage for 10 hours, with Hatcher in near hysterics claiming his life was in danger because of what he knew of local law enforcement's involvement in cocaine trafficking. Taking over the newspaper building, he said, was the only way to draw attention to the corruption and save his own life. Hatcher surrendered without injuring anyone when then-Gov. James G. Martin agreed to have a task force investigate the claims. Hatcher was acquitted on federal hostage-taking charges but was later found guilty of state kidnapping and weapons charges. He served five years of an 18-year sentence. 'Nobody's that lucky' Rumors that the sheriff's department was in cahoots with people it should have been hauling into jail had circulated for decades. Current Robeson County District Attorney Johnson Britt, 48, whose father and grandfather were also lawyers, recalls as a boy hearing suspicions that bootleggers were paying off deputies. As moonshine went out of fashion, dope dealers were said to enjoy similar protections, and word was that the cocaine runners who followed did, too. Britt, who took office in 1994, was not alone in finding it curious then that the sheriff's highway drug interdiction team, working the stretch of Interstate 95 that runs through the county, was able to intercept more contraband than almost any other unit in the country. "Nobody's that lucky," Britt said an officer from another department told him. The officer suspected the agents were getting tips from rival dealers. Britt also couldn't help noticing that some deputies lived better than their salaries would seem to support. Some wore designer clothes and heavy gold jewelry and had expensive cars, boats, jet skis and motorcycles. He heard that a group of officers had gone to Charlotte and had Lasik eye surgery together. Some talked about cruises they had taken. "I've never been on a cruise in my life," Britt said. But what finally prompted him to ask the State Bureau of Investigation to look into the department was a drug case that fell apart after it became clear in court that a deputy had lied to get a search warrant. Once charges were brought in that case, Britt said, the allegations started pouring in. In cooperation with the FBI, state investigators seemed to comb through everything in the department as part of Operation Tarnished Badge. The charges accumulated. In federal court in Raleigh, before the same judge who had presided over Eddie Hatcher's first trial, one by one, every officer charged pleaded guilty. Investigators found that some deputies in the drug unit had worked with drug dealers to learn when other dealers would be holding large amounts of cash or drugs. The officers would raid the dealers' homes or stop their vehicles and confiscate the drugs or money, skimming part or taking it all and sharing the proceeds with co-conspirators. In one case, two deputies went to Virginia Beach and kidnapped men they had been told would have as much as $400,000 in drug money in their van. En route back to Robeson County, an officer shot one of the men in the foot to try to get him to reveal where the cash was hidden. To Britt, the most grievous charge was one of perjury against former Sheriff Glenn Maynor, who took office at the same time Britt was sworn in as district attorney. Maynor has admitted that he lied to a grand jury during the investigation when he denied knowing some of his officers were selling counterfeit satellite cards, essentially stealing a television signal. He also admitted to having deputies clear debris and do other yard work at his home, and to having them do campaign work for him, all while they were on the county's clock. Maynor, 61, left office shortly before he was charged. Britt said he and Maynor never got along because the sheriff let his deputies get away with shoddy work and then blamed Britt when the cases had to be dismissed. "Here he took an oath to enforce and uphold the law and ... he committed perjury in the grand jury," Britt said. "It was contrary to the oath he took and contrary to the image he portrayed." Maynor, who couldn't be reached for comment, is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday. Judge Terrence Boyle has said Maynor could get as much as 10 years in prison. Not a deal-breaker Gregory Cummings, executive director of the county's economic development office, said that since the investigation began, not one industry scout has asked him about it. They're more interested, he said, in the county's available work force, the presence of a community college and UNC-Pembroke, and infrastructure that includes one interstate and another that is almost complete. Just last week, Piedmont Natural Gas announced plans to build a new storage facility in Robeson County worth more than $300 million. Bill Greene, a co-owner of Somewhere in Time, an antiques mall on a service road off I-95 in Lumberton, holds a view not uncommon among county residents: that lawmen who did wrong should be punished but that some of the charges in the case seemed gratuitous. The making and selling of fraudulent satellite TV cards didn't seem that serious, Greene said. And the work deputies did for the sheriff? "If he's the boss and he tells you to do it, you're going to do it," Greene said. In court, lawyers have said deputies may have been more vulnerable to temptation because they were underpaid and overstretched, asked to cover a 950-square-mile area with 120 to 130 officers; because cash was so available; and because the people they were taking it from most often were drug dealers. After Hatcher's arrest for The Robesonian incident, the governor's task force said it found no evidence of wrongdoing by the sheriff's office. At the time, many county residents said that could only have been because it didn't really look. Once he heard what turned up in Operation Tarnished Badge, Britt said he wanted to be among the first to admit that "Eddie Hatcher was right all those years ago. He just went about it the wrong way." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath