Pubdate: Fri, 29 Jan 2010 Source: Daily Reflector (Greenville, NC) Copyright: 2010 Daily Reflector Contact: http://www.reflector.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1456 Author: Michael Abramowitz DOWNFALL OF A DEPUTY: THE ROAD TO PRISON The trial and conviction of a former Pitt County sheriff's deputy this week shed light on how a drug investigation turned into an internal probe at the sheriff's office. Former Lt. Michelle Pollard, 40, was sentenced in Pitt County Superior Court to six to eight months in prison after being found guilty of obstruction of justice and willful failure to discharge her duties. The following timeline outlines events in order as presented by courtroom testimony. August 2005 The prosecution's chief witness against Pollard, Gina Wooten, bears a child with sheriff's deputy Shannon Stewart. Their relationship is short-lived, but they remain connected through the child. Early 2009 Wooten enters a relationship with David Nobles, meets his best friend, Richard Huggins, and begins to smoke marijuana and occasionally use cocaine. April 15, 2009 Huggins, who is a confidential informant for the Pitt County Sheriff's Office narcotics unit, tells his handlers that Wooten will be delivering marijuana. Wooten is stopped with marijuana in her truck by narcotics officer Mike Stroud but is not arrested. Stewart is informed of the incident by his chief, John Guard. April 21, 2009 Stewart, seeking an attorney to gain child custody from Wooten, asks advice from his supervisor, Lt. Michelle Pollard, and also tells her about the marijuana stop. Pollard tells him she will find investigation information in the computer, but data is not logged into the system at the time. Wooten accepts $200 from Huggins and, at his request, purchases cocaine from a woman named "Crystal," then delivers the drugs to Huggins at his workplace. The buy is part of an attempt by narcotics officers to identify cocaine sources. The transaction is observed and recorded by detectives and entered into a classified, limited-access internal computer file at the sheriff's office. April 22, 2009 Pollard finds information about the cocaine transaction in the computer and calls Wooten to warn her to cease drug activities. Wooten can't talk. Pollard asks her to call back. Wooten calls Stroud, the deputy who caught her with marijuana, tells him about Pollard and asks him why she called. Stroud instructs Wooten to call Pollard and find out what she wants. Wooten calls Pollard. Pollard tells her to stop drug activities and shares details from computer report. Pollard tells her not to tell anyone they spoke. Wooten tells Pollard she already talked to Stroud. Pollard tells Wooten to tell Stroud it was just "girl talk." Stewart goes to Pollard again. Pollard shows him information about the cocaine transaction in the classified computer file. Stewart insists they must not interfere in that investigation and argues with Pollard, who wants to warn Wooten. Stewart alerts their supervisor, Guard, that Pollard urged him to warn Wooten. Huggins calls Wooten to arrange another cocaine transaction as part of the narcotics investigation. Wooten refuses to participate. Stewart tells Guard that he thinks Pollard will tell Wooten. Guard checks the computer and finds the records are gone. Later testimony from Det. Vance Head, who is leading the drug investigation, reveals he ordered the file shut down when Wooten changed her behavior, making him suspicious that she was tipped off. April 23, 2009 Stewart tells Pollard he spoke with Guard and advises Pollard to tell the truth about accessing the file if asked. Sheriff Mac Manning already had asked her about the file. She denies accessing it. May 1, 2009 Huggins asks Wooten to make another transaction for him, but Wooten won't discuss anything with him and backs away from interactions with Huggins. May 15, 2009 Pollard calls Wooten several times. She fabricates stories for her about the purpose of their phone conversations. Pollard tells Wooten to say they exchanged numbers at Wal-Mart. She later changes that location to McDonald's after Stewart tells Wooten that Wal-Mart surveillance video will be reviewed. Wooten tells Pollard she is getting confused about the stories. June 2009 (unspecified dates) Wooten is interviewed by Detective Head, who questions Wooten's phone calls with Pollard. First, Wooten tries to tell the detective the fabricated stories Pollard instructed her to use, then confesses to her true conversations with Pollard and agrees to cooperate with their investigation. State Bureau of Investigation agent Randy Myers is informed of the situation and begins a probe. July 2, 2009 Pollard is indicted by a grand jury for obstruction of justice and willful failure to discharge duties. Jan. 25-27 Pollard is tried on charges. Pollard holds her composure throughout her three days of the trial process. When she hears the jury's verdict -- guilty of obstruction of justice and willful failure to discharge her duties -- she does not show emotion. She shows no emotion when Judge William Pittman sentences her to the maximum sentence -- six to eight months -- because she violated the public's trust in law enforcement. Then she learns that, rather than being allowed to remain free on bond during her appeal process, she will begin her sentence immediately, and watches the handcuffs placed on her wrists. Her mouth quivers, her eyes well, and the tears fall. She looks at her attorney, follows the orders of the court bailiff and is escorted out of the courtroom to additional processing and a van that will take her to Central Prison in Raleigh. Her law enforcement officer's certification also is revoked. Pittman asked Pollard, before he passed down his sentence, if she had any comment to offer. "I didn't intend to impede any investigation," she said. "I had no idea there was an investigation, and I never read the actual report." During the two days leading up to that statement, Pitt County District Attorney Clark Everett called seven witnesses whose testimony supported the charges and other evidence he presented, including documented phone records, computerized investigative files and an account of each person's role in the investigation. Each witness account was corroborated by other witnesses. Pollard's attorney, Maynard Harrel of Plymouth, did not call a witness on behalf of his client, including Pollard, who several times during the trial shook her head at others' testimony. He presented no evidence to contradict Everett's account of the events. Harrell's only exculpatory statement in his closing address was that Everett's chief witness, Wooten, herself a former sheriff's employee, could not be believed because she was an "interested witness" who had much to gain by cooperating with the prosecution. Harrell made a final plea to any juror who might have a reasonable doubt of Pollard's guilt not to be swayed by those who would convict her, even if he or she stood alone. It took the jury 90 minutes to render its unanimous verdict. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake