Pubdate: Wed, 19 Dec 2001
Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC)
Copyright: 2001 Greensboro News & Record, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.news-record.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173
Author: Cheris Hodges

HEGE TO REIN IN DRUG OFFICERS

LEXINGTON -- Davidson County Sheriff Gerald Hege, stung by the arrest last 
week of three top vice-narcotics deputies, announced Tuesday that the unit 
will have more oversight.

Hege will have a more hands-on role, such as going out on major drug raids 
and searches, he said at a morning news conference. He will work more night 
shifts, too.

He also assigned a team of officers to oversee the operation of the unit. 
Maj. Brad Glisson, Maj. Danny Owens, Capt. Jody Shoaf and Capt. Chris Coble 
will not work cases but will document each step of operations, such as 
making sure seized drugs and other evidence get logged into the evidence room.

Previously, the vice-narcotics unit operated on its own, Shoaf said. Lt. 
David Woodall, one of the six men arrested last week on federal drug 
charges, was involved in the cases and had direct supervision of the unit, 
Shoaf said.

During his first six years in office, Hege said he worked more closely with 
the vice-narcotics unit but has not done so in the past year. He said he 
thinks that is when problems began.

He also said that what happened at his department is no different from what 
other police agencies have faced.

"You can't guarantee that it won't happen again," he said. "But there will 
be more supervisors going on searches and raids."

Officers from the tactical team have been assigned to fill the vacancies in 
the unit, Hege said. Their names were not released because they will be 
working undercover.

"You just have to continue on," Hege said. "You have to rebuild, start all 
over and do it at a slow pace."

Woodall, 34, Lt. William Monroe Rankin, 32, and Sgt. Douglas Edward 
Westmoreland, 49; Archdale police Sgt. Christopher James Shetley, 35; Wyatt 
Nathan Kepley, 26; and Marco Aurelio Acosta Soza, 23, of Lexington were 
arrested by the FBI last week and each charged with one count of conspiracy 
to distribute controlled substances.

An indictment by a federal grand jury charges the six men with distributing 
220 pounds of marijuana, 11 pounds of cocaine, anabolic steroids and 
Ecstasy during the past year.

The arrests not only hurt the department's image; they also jeopardize some 
of the cases the deputies were involved in.

According to records from the Davidson County Clerk of Court's office, the 
three deputies had 35 pending cases in the system. There is a chance those 
cases will have to be thrown out.

During the news conference in the sheriff's department's law library, Hege 
also responded to claims that he had heard of the allegations against the 
deputies but dismissed them as part of an election-year ploy to discredit 
him and his department.

According to the 33-page affidavit the FBI released Friday, Woodall told 
the FBI's informant that Hege confronted him and Westmoreland about their 
alleged involvement in selling drugs. Woodall told the informant Hege 
believed the information was a smear attempt by the SBI.

The sheriff said he confronted the officers about drug allegations, but he 
said he never said it was part of a political attack.

"I have made (derogatory) statements about the SBI in the past, and I think 
(Woodall) said that to ease his mind" about what the SBI was looking into, 
Hege said.

Hege said he contacted the SBI after he heard the allegations to find out 
more about the investigation, but his calls were not returned.

The six men will be arraigned before a federal judge in Winston-Salem this 
morning.
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