Pubdate: Tue, 05 May 2009
Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC)
Copyright: 2009 Fayetteville Observer
Contact:  http://www.fayobserver.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150
Author: Drew Brooks and Corey G. Johnson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States)

2 SPRING LAKE POLICE OFFICERS ARRESTED

SPRING LAKE -- The Spring Lake Police Department was stripped of its
remaining police powers Monday, and two of its officers were arrested.
Sgt. Alfonzo Devone Whittington Jr. and Sgt. Darryl Eugene Coulter Sr.
were arrested after being indicted by a special Cumberland County
grand jury. About midafternoon, Sheriff Moose Butler and District
Attorney Ed Grannis met with Police Chief A.C. Brown and Town Manager
Larry Faison to discuss the action being taken against the Police
Department. They delivered an order from Chief District Court Judge
Beth Keever saying that all criminal work within the town, including
misdemeanors, would be handled by the Sheriff's Office.

Grannis also said he plans to dismiss all pending misdemeanor cases
filed by Spring Lake officers and will evaluate pending felony cases.
The action, which Grannis later called unprecedented, has in effect
stripped Spring Lake police of any remaining powers.

The Sheriff's Office set up a mobile command unit at the Spring Lake
Family Resource Center on Odell Road. Butler said roughly four
deputies on rotating shifts will work out of that location.

Starting today, all emergency calls in the town will be forwarded to
the Sheriff's Office. Residents who need assistance should call
323-1500. Butler could not say how long his officers would handle
Spring Lake's investigations.

"We're stretched, but we're going to be here till the issue's
resolved," he said. Butler and Grannis met with four members of the
county Board of Commissioners behind closed doors following Monday's
arrests. After the hour-long meeting, board Chairwoman Jeannette
Council said the commissioners support Butler providing law
enforcement for Spring Lake residents until at least June 3. Council
said the county can afford the expense without a special
appropriation.

After June 3, the commissioners urged Spring Lake officials to
contract with the sheriff to continue the service until town leaders
reconstitute the Police Department "as a fully functioning law
enforcement agency." Late Monday, many Spring Lake officers said they
did not know whether they should show up for work today or what the
future holds for them. Town leaders evaded those questions Monday.

"Give us a little time," Mayor Ethel Clark said before leaving Town
Hall. "We're still formalizing a plan." Brown remained in his office
after Grannis and Butler left and would not answer questions from
reporters. He surfaced briefly to check his vehicle and said, "I got a
hot one," before going back inside. Faison referred all questions to a
news release he said he faxed. He then slipped out of Town Hall to
avoid reporters waiting at the rear of the building. The Observer did
not receive a fax.

2 officers charged Whittington, who joined the department in October
2005, was charged with 11 crimes, including embezzlement by public
officer, obtaining property by false pretenses, larceny and
obstruction of justice. The charges stem from $2,900 that was
allegedly taken from the department's evidence room. Whittington, who
also served as the department's evidence custodian and internal
affairs investigator, allegedly took the money between September and
January, according to the indictment. He then directed officers to
alter reports and lie about the handling of the money. His bail was
set at $100,000. Coulter, who has been with the department since July
1999, was charged with 20 crimes, including breaking and entering,
second-degree kidnapping and obstruction of justice.

The charges stem from an April 27, 2008, incident at a home on the 400
block of Vass Road.

According to the indictments, Coulter broke into the home, which was
occupied by Mark Anthony Jones Jr., Jimmy Jovan Taylor and Samuel
Darnell Wallace. He assaulted the men and forcibly removed them from
the home while threatening them with a handgun and a shotgun,
kidnapped them and then held them against their will by handcuffing
the men.

The indictments allege that Coulter, while supervising three officers
also involved in the false arrests, had no legal justification for the
actions. Coulter also was indicted for his alleged actions during an
investigation at the Sleep Inn Motel. According to the indictment,
Coulter lied when he said he smelled marijuana in a room from which
officers seized $2,900. That's the same money that Whittington is
accused of later taking from the evidence room. His bail was set at
$250,000.

Both officers appeared before Senior Resident Superior Court Judge E.
Lynn Johnson about 4:30 p.m. They were escorted into the courtroom by
agents with the State Bureau of Investigation. Johnson read the
charges against them and told them the maximum penalty they face for
each.

According to Johnson, Whittington could face 24 years, two months in
prison if convicted on all charges. Coulter could face 32 years, four
months in prison. Whittington said he planned to hire his own lawyer.
Coulter asked for a court-appointed lawyer, which the judge said would
have to come from outside the county's public defender's office.

String of problems Monday's arrests are the latest in a string of
problems for the Police Department.

In a letter to the county's two top judges Monday, Grannis said he
first realized the department had troubles in December 2006. It was at
that time, the District Attorney's Office learned Spring Lake officers
mishandled child abuse allegations and the subsequent death
investigation of 3-year-old Anijah Burr.

He later asked that all homicides be investigated by the Sheriff's
Office and then expanded that request to include all felonies. In
mid-2007, Grannis said he asked the SBI to conduct a criminal inquiry
into the department's narcotics division.

An independent assessment of the department, done at the request of
the town Board of Aldermen in late 2007, found a number of problems,
including a lack of training for officers, a lack of written
directives and the leadership of Brown. Originally, Grannis said he
was concerned that the department lacked trained manpower and
expertise. Now, he said, he has a much deeper concern. Grannis wrote
that the department still was under investigation by state agents. He
said the SBI's report made him "genuinely disheartened" and that many
of the questions raised in the report came from officers within the
department. "Within our democratic society, we entrust law enforcement
with significant authority and responsibility in carrying out our
criminal laws," he wrote. "... This report raises genuine questions
concerning the entrusting of such significant responsibilities to the
Spring Lake Police Department." 
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