Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jun 2008 Source: Star Press, The (Muncie, IN) Copyright: 2008 The Star Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/m0DXtEYZ Website: http://www.thestarpress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1925 Author: Douglas Walker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) JUDGE WANTS BANKING RECORDS IN FORFEITURE PROBE MUNCIE -- Judge Richard Dailey wants records reflecting all deposits and withdrawals -- and copies of cashed checks -- from a First Merchants Bank account that contained funds confiscated from accused drug dealers by the Muncie-Delaware County Drug Task Force and the county prosecutor's office. The Delaware Circuit Court 2 judge on Friday issued court orders for those banking records, along with those of two city government accounts and tax forms reflecting payments to Delaware County Prosecutor Mark McKinney, Deputy Prosecutor Eric Hoffman and former Deputy Prosecutor Louis Denney, who filed the civil lawsuits that led to the forfeitures. Dailey -- who in recent weeks has conducted a series of hearings on what the judge referred to in Friday's orders as "allegations of fraud upon the court in civil drug forfeiture cases" -- also issued an order for "all information" on federal grants that city government, the DTF and the county sheriff's department "used for drug interdiction or enforcement, in Muncie, Ind., from 1996 to present..." In one of Friday's orders, Dailey wrote that McKinney had "repeatedly asserted to this court that he may enter into confidential agreements and dispose of drug forfeiture funds without court adjudication..." The judge wrote that through his own investigation he had determined that grants from the U.S. Department of Justice required that all forfeitures "must first be adjudicated in state courts." In ordering that he be given copies of the banking and tax records, Dailey also noted testimony that McKinney last year received a personal check for $8,413 from an auctioneer who had sold property seized from suspected drug dealers, and that a tax form reflects the city in 2007 paid the prosecutor more than $5,000, also in drug forfeiture funds. Mayor Sharon McShurley recently filed a complaint against McKinney with the Indiana Supreme Court's disciplinary commission, alleging that forfeiture funds hadn't been deposited in the city's general fund as required under state law. Contacted Friday, Dailey said he would likely hold another forfeiture-related hearing next week. McKinney's attorney, Kevin McGoff of Indianapolis, could not be reached for comment Friday. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake