Pubdate: Fri, 19 Sep 2003 Source: Dispatch, The (NC) Copyright: 2003, The Lexington Dispatch Contact: http://www.the-dispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1583 Author: Rachel Leonard, The Dispatch Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) AFFIDAVITS SAY HEGE TOOK MORE THAN $6,200 Indictments against suspended Davidson County Sheriff Gerald Hege paint a picture of a man who, on a few occasions, improperly used a total of $6,200 in vice funds to pay for election celebration dinners in 1998 and 2002 and for his own travels in recent years. But affidavits released this week describe a much darker reality. According to some of Hege's top deputies, the sheriff had regularly embezzled or attempted to embezzle vice funds since at least 1998, taking possibly tens of thousands of dollars over a five-year period and ordering subordinates such as Major Brad Glisson and former vice officers Scott Woodall and Doug Westmoreland, both of whom are now serving time in federal prison, to cover for him. District Attorney Garry Frank declined this morning to comment on the nature of the additional allegations in the affidavits not covered under the indictments. He said the affidavits, which he personally filed with the court, speak for themselves. Frank said there were reasons behind indicting Hege on some of the allegations and including others only in the removal petition, but he declined to discuss those reasons. "It's two completely different proceedings with two completely different purposes," he said. "For that reason, there were some things that were appropriate for one and not the other." Hege was indicted Monday on 15 felony counts, including five charges each of embezzlement and obtaining property by false pretenses. The indictments accuse Hege of instructing a subordinate sometime between May 1 and Dec. 31, 1998, to take $2,100 in vice funds to replace seized money that had disappeared from safekeeping. He is also charged with using $1,100 in vice funds between 1998 and 2002 to pay for two election celebration dinners at Staley's Charcoal Steakhouse in Winston-Salem. Hege was also indicted on charges he stole $1,000 in vice funds on June 28, 2002, and $2,000 in vice funds on Feb. 19, 2003. Not mentioned in Monday's indictments are allegations that Hege stole vice funds on many other occasions and instructed his deputies to cover for him by fabricating receipts. The special vice funds, allocated to the sheriff's office by the county finance department, came in the form of checks that were usually for $4,000 and issued every few months. Hege often took half of that amount, some current and former department employees said. Sabrina Hopkins, a former administrative assistant for Hege, said on "numerous occasions Woodall or Glisson would come back to my office after receiving vice money from the sheriff and tell me that they had only got one half of the money. I estimate that that occurred approximately 12 times." Hopkins also said she personally witnessed Hege keep $2,000 in vice funds sometime prior to her leaving the office in 2001. She also notes that Glisson told her Hege always requested funds before he went on a trip. "I then noticed that Sheriff Hege requested some vice funds just before taking a trip to South Dakota," she wrote. "... Glisson had told me that Hege had kept one-half of the vice funds that were requested just before the South Dakota trip." Hopkins said she noticed that Hege always kept his left shirt pocket full of at least eight to 10 $100 bills. Officer Todd Kates said that while working as a vice officer in 2000, the sheriff gave him $2,000 in vice money and asked him to write a receipt for $4,000. "I told Sheriff Hege that I was not going to sign for $4,000 unless I received $4,000," Kates said. "... At the time, Sheriff Hege tried to explain he used the money to try and pay his own informants," Kates' affidavit continues. "I have never interviewed any of Sheriff Hege's informants about any information on drugs or anything else. Our departmental policy requires us to have pay-out sheets to document where we spend vice money and I assume the sheriff would have the same rules." Glisson, formerly a captain over administration, also said Hege asked him to fabricate receipts. In late 2000, Hege asked him to write receipts to the effect that Glisson had received all the special vice funds appropriated by the finance department for fiscal year 1999-2000, Glisson said. Although he admits elsewhere in his statement to fabricating some receipts, Glisson said he refused to comply with that request. "The sheriff instructed me to write off the expenditures to 'informants or whatever,'" Glisson said. "I could not comply because I had no knowledge of how the special funds money received for that year was spent," he said. "I believe that what Sheriff Hege was asking me to do was 'wrong and illegal.'" From that point on, Glisson said, Hege dealt directly with Woodall concerning the special vice funds. Several officers say Woodall and Westmoreland were frustrated with the sheriff taking vice funds. Lt. Steve Jones said that in the summer of 1999, Westmoreland came to him and appeared to be upset. "I asked Deputy Westmoreland what was wrong and he advised that 'Sheriff Hege wanted him to falsify some documents and that the sheriff was a thief,'" Jones said. Jones also said that around November 2001, an intoxicated Westmoreland told him that Hege was "driving him crazy" and that the sheriff was riding his motorcycle to the Sturgis bike rally in South Dakota. "Mr. Westmoreland went on to say that the 'sheriff was using sheriff's department funds to pay for the trip and Mr. Westmoreland was to cover it up,'" Jones said. Former vice officer Kevin Black said one of the reasons he resigned in February 2001 was because he had heard Woodall and Westmoreland talk about missing buy money. "Woodall stated to me that he was worried that the SBI would find out the buy money was missing," Black said. "He stated that Sheriff Hege wanted him to come up with receipts for the money in the event the SBI wanted to check the money." Black continued: "Lt. Woodall told me at the time that the narcotics unit was not getting all the buy money it was supposed to. He stated that if the finance office wrote a check to the narcotics unit for $5,000 the unit would get half the money. The check would go through Sheriff Hege first." After Woodall and Westmoreland were arrested in December 2001, Glisson said that Hege told him "if there were ever a question about the funds expenditures or the misappropriating or diversion of special funds he (Sheriff Hege) would use Woodall and Westmoreland as 'scapegoats.'" Other top officers also make references to Hege stealing or attempting to steal vice money in their affidavits. Lt. Monty Myers, head of the department's vice unit, said that in the fall of 2002 Hege's secretary told him Hege needed $2,000 of the $4,000 she was giving the unit. "I was not told what the sheriff needed the money for and in fact the sheriff ended up never getting the money," Myers said. Major Danny Owens, formerly Hege's chief deputy, noted in his affidavit that Hege had taken portions of the vice money on several occasions. "I have noticed over the years that when Sheriff Hege obtains special funds, it is usually just before Sheriff Hege would take a trip," he said. "Sheriff Hege has informed us that he has been to New Orleans, Oklahoma, California and Florida allegedly giving speeches and for other purposes." None of the indictments against Hege mention accusations by Woodall or Westmoreland. The district attorney's office and SBI agents say the investigation is ongoing. Hege's removal hearing is scheduled for Oct. 27, but no trial date has been set on the criminal charges. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager