Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2009 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Author: Dan Galindo Note: Letters from newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) EX-DEPUTY ADMITS GUILT He Says He Stole, Lied About Cancer A former Yadkin County sheriff's deputy will spend at least 34 months in prison after he pleaded guilty yesterday to charges that he embezzled money from the agency and concocted a lie that led people to raise money for his cancer treatments. Darrell Thornton admitted in Yadkin Superior Court that he changed a doctor's colonoscopy report to make fellow employees think he had cancer. Thornton pleaded guilty to 10 counts of embezzlement, two counts of attempting to traffic in opium and OxyContin, one count of obtaining property by false pretenses and common-law forgery. The pleas were part of a deal with prosecutor Fred Bauer in which eight counts of larceny by an employee were dropped and all the guilty pleas were merged into four charges for sentencing. Judge Edwin G. Wilson Jr. gave Thornton consecutive sentences that add up to a minimum of 34 months in prison and a maximum of 44 months. Thornton was arrested Nov. 6 after an investigation by the State Bureau of Investigation. He was a deputy for about five years and was the sheriff's office's narcotics investigator. Thornton was accused of taking money from the sheriff's office fund used to buy drugs during undercover investigations and from money seized during investigations. The total was $6,044, including $1,800 raised during a hot-dog fundraiser that was organized by a Yadkin 911 dispatcher and cancer survivor, who reached out to Thornton. Thornton's attorney, Chris Beechler, said that Thornton did have some medical problems and during treatment became addicted to OxyContin. After he told fellow employees he had tests done to see if he had cancer, the employees reached out to help, Beechler said. Thornton changed the colonoscopy report because the sheriff's office asked to see medical records, Beechler said. Thornton had missed work for his medical problems and the sheriff's office had become suspicious after money started to be missing. "He made no excuses (yesterday), just apologized to the sheriff's office and all the people he hurt," Beechler said. "He was sorry for the black eye any law-enforcement agency incurs when an officer abuses the trust of the public." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin