Pubdate: Fri, 05 Nov 1999 Source: Commercial Appeal (TN) Copyright: 1999 The Commercial Appeal Contact: Box 334, Memphis, TN 38101 Fax: (901)529-6445 Website: http://www.gomemphis.com/ Author: Lead Editorial LACK OF ACCOUNTABILITY TAINTS POLICE UNDERCOVER UNIT THE SLUSH FUND the Memphis Police Department's Organized Crime Unit built with confiscated drug money and allowed to run out of control gravely threatens public confidence in the department's integrity. Police and city officials have moved usefully, if belatedly, to rein in the many excesses arising from the use of forfeiture money. But removing the suspicion of corruption that unjustly taints the department's overwhelming majority of honest officers and supervisors will require more aggressive action - both administrative reforms and criminal indictments and convictions if warranted. A state audit released Thursday, largely in response to reporting by The Commercial Appeal, documents in startling detail the utter lack of accountability with which Organized Crime Unit officials spent seized drug funds. That money was to be used to enhance drug enforcement, through such investigative tools as payments to informants and undercover operations, but often was diverted to other purposes - some of them illegal - according to the audit. The report offers the blunt but evidently justified conclusion that "the illegal policies and procedures developed by the city and the lack of review by auditors independent of the (police) department resulted in a blatant lack of internal controls over undercover cash operations. . . ." How blatant? The audit, which examined OCU uses of drug forfeiture funds from mid-1994 through March of this year, cites 34 findings of improper conduct and a dozen "highlights" of particular outrages. Each is more disheartening than the last. In just one year, more than $100,000 ostensibly earmarked for confidential police operations was spent on other things, including lawn care, golf fees, phone bills and meals. Officers collected more than $43,500 to "pay" drug informants who apparently didn't exist. Undercover cash and credit cards helped furnish the office of former police director Walter Winfrey and upgrade sound systems on OCU vehicles. Police officials charged to the department more than $1,500 in air travel costs for spouses and family members. Two officers pocketed a $900 refund they collected when their hotel accommodations, paid for by the city, were unsatisfactory. More than $90,000 spent from confidential funds, and more than $65,000 of police travel expenses related to drug fund operations, were documented inadequately or not at all. Another $17,500 in travel spending was improper. Other large sums of cash floated around loosely. The audit charges that Memphis police officials developed their own procedures for managing undercover cash that often were at odds with state guidelines, but attributed them improperly to the state Comptroller's Office. It observes that independent auditors never have reviewed OCU records, and that city auditors did not examine them before last spring. The OCU routinely ignored city purchasing rules by invoking its confidential status, according to the audit. Interim Police Director Bill Oldham, who assumed the department's top spot just weeks before the audit period ended, already has tightened controls in response to the audit findings. For example, the audit notes that the Police Department now follows state rules on the use of seized drug money. Mayor Willie Herenton says his administration "will not tolerate the activities revealed by the audit." But the question remains: Why was the OCU permitted to operate for so long as a law unto itself in administering drug money? Criminal probes by the FBI and Tennessee Bureau of Investigation may provide some answers. It is in the Police Department's own interest to cooperate with those investigations. The fact that the money at issue was the product of criminal activity rather than taxpayer contributions does not mitigate the offenses described in the audit. Oldham's prediction that the findings will "discredit the reputation" of the OCU and his department seems sadly accurate. What matters now is what the Police Department and city administration do to determine how such a fiasco occurred - and to ensure that it never happens again. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea