Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jun 2008 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2008 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Russ Henderson, Staff Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) MARIJUANA FOUND IN LONG-SEALED CITY SAFE FAIRHOPE -- The event was planned and advertised weeks ago: At the new Fairhope Museum of History, officials would open a city safe that had been abandoned and unused since 1971. What would be inside? Nothing? Old city records? On Thursday morning, a crowd of nearly 30 Fairhopers watched as locksmith Nevitt Baker lifted away its heavy, black door. A musty smell filled the room, and the crowd laughed as news cameras and curious locals closed in on the open safe. One woman rushed her young son out of the museum, saying she didn't want him to see what was inside. A few called out the obvious -- its bottom shelves were filled with marijuana. The vault apparently had last been used by police investigators to stash drug evidence. "Here is somebody's name, somebody I remember, who would be terribly embarrassed right now," said Donnie Barrett, the museum's director, as he later examined a label attached to one of several matchboxes filled with dry, 37-year-old dope. "It looks like a whole bunch of dope is what we've found here. I wish it was a little bit more than that," Barrett said. The city's Police Department used the building until moving to its present offices in 2002, long after City Hall had moved in 1971. But paperwork stored in the safe alongside the marijuana seemed to indicate that none of it predated 1971, Barrett said. Why was this evidence left behind or forgotten? "That's not the sort of historical question we'd wanted to have to ask," Barrett said. "But it's better than nothing." Soon, police Cpl. Brett Murray arrived at the museum to confiscate the old contraband. "I kind of wish it had stayed closed because I liked the idea of wondering what was in there," Murray said. He said he and his friends had speculated about the safe's contents since they were young, when the building was being used by the Police Department. But its combination had been lost and its door had been painted shut, he said. Murray placed the decades-old evidence into a large, brown paper bag. He said he'd have it placed in the department's current evidence vault for later processing or disposal by investigators. Murray said he didn't know yet whether the rediscovered evidence would result in new charges. Baker, a locksmith based in Fairhope, said he'd used both manual and mechanical methods to open the 3cm HALF-foot-square safe, which was built in 1867. From research, he'd determined that its combination lock had three wheels. The wheels had 100 possible positions apiece -- each position represented by a number on the lock's dial. But only one succession of three numbers would open the lock. That meant that, just dialing numbers randomly, one had a 1 in 1 million chance of hitting the right combination, he said. The first number in the combination he found by hand, the method used by bank robbers in the movies, he said. But the other two wheels proved more troublesome. A built-in safety feature prevented finding their right positions by hand, Baker said. So he used a special robot that dialed the numbers randomly, then turned the latch each time. The robot unlocked the safe in about six hours, he said. The vault remained unopened for weeks as Thursday's event was planned and advertised. "We wanted it to be done publicly. We felt that whatever was in there belonged to the whole community," Barrett said. Among items in the safe were a green diary with a peace symbol drawn on its front, a cup containing a collection of small bags of marijuana, a few rolled joints, several matchboxes and small manila envelopes containing more marijuana with accompanying written materials, some drafted by officers and others by witnesses. "I'm a little disappointed that we didn't find a lot of history. We found a lot of dope," Barrett said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake