Pubdate: Sun, 18 Mar 2001
Source: Evansville Courier & Press (IN)
Copyright: 2001 The Evansville Courier
Contact:  P. O. Box 268 Evansville, IN 47702-0268
Fax: 812-464-7435
Website: http://courier.evansville.net/
Author:Scripps Howard News Service
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

WHERE'S THE DOPE? POLICE LOSE 5,000 POUNDS OF MARIJUANA

Chatham County, N.C., sheriff's deputies seized 5,000 pounds of marijuana 
in an undercover sting last year, stacked it high, called the media and 
showed it off.

But now the marijuana is missing, the alleged dealers have vanished, the 
FBI is investigating and the department can't explain what happened.

The big drug bust has turned into a big embarrassment.

"It's the sort of situation where it's hard to know whether to laugh or 
cry," commissioners' chairman Gary Phillips said. "It's really absurd as 
far as it goes."

In September, someone stole 3,000 pounds of the marijuana from a 23-ton 
Army truck parked behind the sheriff's department, where it was being 
stored as evidence. Soon after, deputies buried the rest near an old 
landfill, but that also has disappeared.

"What a nightmare!" said Sheriff Ike Gray, who was appointed after an 
ailing Donald Whitt retired in November.

County officials are questioning the department's handling of the $5 
million worth of marijuana, saying deputies stored it in an unsecured place 
and kept it for too long.

"That's 5,000 pounds of dope that's loose in our community that was taken 
off the streets," said commissioner Rick Givens, who has been flooded with 
calls from disgusted constituents.

In an effort involving the FBI and several Chatham County law-enforcement 
agencies, a narcotics team seized the marijuana Feb. 8, 2000, at a barn. 
Officers watched a group of men unload 163 plastic-wrapped bundles from a 
tractor-trailer.

Two men were arrested. At least three other men escaped in the 
tractor-trailer. Officers never apprehended them.

Deputies loaded all the marijuana into a surplus Army National Guard truck 
on loan from the Siler City Police Department, said Chief Lewis Phillips, 
whose department participated in the operation.

 From there, deputies drove to Pittsboro, where they parked the truck 
behind the sheriff's department. "At the time," Gray said, "there wasn't 
enough space to store it anywhere else."

The arrested men were charged with felony trafficking of marijuana. Those 
charges were dismissed in March 2000 so the men, both Mexican nationals, 
could be turned over to the Immigration and Naturalization Service. But INS 
officials at the district office in Atlanta have no record of the men. And 
no federal charges have been filed against them, according to the U.S. 
attorney's office in Greensboro.

More than seven months after the marijuana was seized, deputies noticed 
most of it was missing. Gray won't comment on how deputies discovered it 
was gone or whether it was checked regularly.

Whitt called the FBI immediately, Gray said.

Deputies buried the remaining ton of marijuana. Gray could not say why 
deputies chose an unsecured spot, but he did say they saved samples for 
court purposes.

Gray said he doesn't know when officials discovered the rest of the 
marijuana was missing.

Last month, Gray said deputies destroyed the remaining marijuana shortly 
after the first theft was discovered. Last week, however, he acknowledged 
the drugs were buried and then stolen.

Gray wouldn't comment on why deputies would bury a ton of marijuana rather 
than burn it.

Special Agent Joanne Morley said the FBI could neither confirm nor deny 
there is an investigation. But Gray said no one in his department, which 
has 52 sworn officers, stole the marijuana.

"The agent in charge has said at this point he has no reason to suspect any 
of our people," he said.

Reached at his home, former sheriff Whitt declined to comment.
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