The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Forfeiture spending by sheriff costs taxpayers

Federal review: Close to $100,000 has been misused in Gwinnett.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

The federal review triggered in July by Gwinnett Sheriff Butch Conway’s purchase of a high-powered muscle car has already identified close to $100,000 in misused asset forfeiture funds, according to records obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, as Department of Justice officials continue to examine expenditur­es.

Local taxpayers have footed the bill for that amount and could be on the hook for several times more by the time the review finishes. In addition to the $69,000 Dodge Charger Hellcat that the sheriff still drives to and from work, federal auditors are reviewing hundreds of thousands of dollars in purchases made by Con-

way’s department.

Like the muscle car, at least one other expenditur­e — a $25,000 donation to a faith-based nonprofit — already has been identified as improper and had to be recouped from local taxpayers, records show. Other purchases under scrutiny range from a $175,000 bus to rifles donated to another agency.

The Hellcat episode, first reported by the media over the summer, drew national attention to the five-term sheriff and his agency’s participat­ion in the federal program that disburses money and property seized in criminal and civil investigat­ions back to local authoritie­s. Sheriff ’s department records obtained by the AJC indicate Justice Department auditors are reviewing several years of purchases made by Conway’s agency.

His spokeswoma­n, Deputy Shannon Volkodav, on Wednesday said the department has a long history of fiscal responsibi­lity and the sheriff is not concerned about the review.

“We fully anticipate that the results of the audit will be favorable,” Volkodav said. “We actually do follow the rules at the sheriff ’s office.”

Gwinnett’s administra­tor said the county is reviewing possible policy changes to ensure forfeiture funds are spent according to federal guidelines.

Critics, meanwhile, called the review of Conway’s expenditur­es “revealing.”

“The findings show the problem with forfeiture, in that law enforcemen­t has an incentive to focus on crime that pays,” said Lee McGrath, an attorney at the Institute for Justice, which calls for curtailing and ultimately abolishing civil asset forfeiture.

McGrath added that agencies sometimes use the funds improperly to “supplement” their budgets and “in this case, create a slush fund.”

A ‘wild hair’

Conway, who started his law enforcemen­t career in 1973 with the Gwinnett County Police Department, was elected sheriff in 1996. The main duties of his office are to serve warrants and operate the local jail, but his deputies sometimes work with federal authoritie­s such as the Drug Enforcemen­t Agency, the FBI and Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

By participat­ing in these joint investigat­ions, the sheriff ’s office is eligible to collect a share of the asset forfeiture funds seized during drug raids and other operations. The cash, and sometimes physical property, are meant as compensati­on for local manpower and expense.

Records show Conway’s federal forfeiture accounts carried a total balance of more than $827,000 at the end of 2017, about a third of which was collected last year alone. Federal rules dictate how local law enforcemen­t agencies can use such funds, but even critics of the program acknowledg­e the rules are not always clear.

The Justice Department’s review appears to be examining expenditur­es in Gwinnett dating back to 2013. Communicat­ions between investigat­ors and the sheriff ’s office reviewed by the AJC under the Georgia Open Records Act suggest federal auditors have questioned several specific purchases.

They include Conway’s $25,000 donation last year to a local nonprofit called MovementFo­rward Inc. In response to auditor’s concerns, Gwinnett County wrote a check in September to reimburse the federal forfeiture account for the donation.

Sheriff’s department records also show two other $25,000 payments to MovementFo­rward made using forfeiture funds — one in 2012 and one in 2016. It’s unclear if auditors have questioned these transactio­ns.

Rev. Markel Hutchins is the leader of MovementFo­rward and its flagship program, One Congregati­on, One Precinct. The group’s website says it helps foster better relationsh­ips between faith leaders and law enforcemen­t. It has held at least a few events locally, including one in Gwinnett following a controvers­ial incident involving two local police officers. Conway was among the attendees of that event.

Hutchins credits Conway and his department with helping the so-called OneCOP program get started — and said if the sheriff ’s contributi­ons weren’t an allowable use of forfeiture funds, he doesn’t know what is.

“This is drug money (from) thugs and people who are literally poisoning our communitie­s,” Hutchins said. “Those drug monies were utilized to invest in actually building relationsh­ips between law enforcemen­t and the communitie­s they serve.”

Justice Department guidelines allow for local law enforcemen­t agencies to support “community based nonprofit organizati­ons ... whose stated missions are supportive of and consistent with a law enforcemen­t effort, policy, and/or initiative.” It’s unclear from records reviewed by the AJC why federal auditors determined MovementFo­rward was not an eligible charity.

Hutchins believes the issue arose because MovementFo­rward does additional work outside the realm of law enforcemen­t.

“I think what probably happened in this instance is that some bureaucrat at the Department of Justice in Washington got a wild hair about the sheriff’s use of that money around that car and started to kind of look at everything,” Hutchins said. “But it makes absolutely no sense to us whatsoever.”

‘Level of confidence’

Communicat­ions between auditors and Conway’s office suggest the federal review team is also examining transactio­ns involving a number of vehicles the sheriff ’s office purchased through the federal program.

Investigat­ors have asked for more informatio­n regarding a $175,000 “motor coach bus” that was purchased in 2016. The sheriff ’s office told investigat­ors that the 30-seat bus is used to, among other things, transport personnel and equipment for disaster relief assistance, search and rescue operations and other large-scale emergency responses.

Additional documentat­ion was requested by federal authoritie­s regarding the use of seven vehicles previously purchased or acquired through the forfeiture program. Investigat­ors also asked about the eventual sale on eBay of four of the vehicles, and if the more than $41,000 in proceeds were deposited back into the sheriff ’s forfeiture account.

Federal forfeiture funds are intended to increase a law enforcemen­t agency’s overall budget and are not permitted to be used to replace or supplant other funding.

Federal guidelines raise questions about other expenditur­es reviewed by the AJC as well.

In 2013, the sheriff ’s office purchased four M6-G government model rifles — for a total of $7,758 — that it later gave to the Georgia State Patrol. According to the Justice Department’s guidelines, agencies can’t purchase items for other law enforcemen­t agencies using forfeiture funds.

Volkodav said that, at the time of the purchase, guidelines were different and did not prohibit such donations. The Justice Department on Wednesday did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

“The DO J guidelines change regularly, and it’s always a challenge to stay on top,” Volkodav said.

Between December 2016 and May 2017, the sheriff ’s office spent $16,150 in forfeiture funds for sheriff’s office supervisor­s to attend seminars from an organizati­on called GameChange­rs. The program bills itself as “a character-based leadership program designed for personal, motivation­al and moral developmen­t.”

Guidelines allow for forfeiture funds to be spent on training and education in “any area necessary to perform official law enforcemen­t duties.”

“Some of it could be completely legitimate,” said William Perry, the executive director of Georgia Ethics Watchdogs. “But because there’s been such a bad use of judgment with this stuff, I think it all should be scrutinize­d.”

Law enforcemen­t’s seizure and redistribu­tion of money and property recovered during investigat­ions has long been controvers­ial, with abuses reported across the country.

Earlier this year, a Justice Department inspector general’s audit found that the Atlanta Police Department had misspent more than $1.4 million in seized funds to renovate a crime lab.

Gwinnett Administra­tor Glenn Stephens said the county has routinely reviewed the sheriff ’s purchases over the years. As a result of the federal probe, Gwinnett’s finance office is examining purchasing policies to see if additional checks need to be put in place to meet federal rules.

“I have confidence in the Sheriff ’s Department, led by Sheriff Conway, and their financial decisions, and neither [of the purchases that already had to be reimbursed] lessens that level of confidence,” Stephens said.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM 2015 ?? Gwinnett Sheriff Butch Conway’s force has a long history of fiscal responsibi­lity and he isn’t concerned by the review, a spokeswoma­n said.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM 2015 Gwinnett Sheriff Butch Conway’s force has a long history of fiscal responsibi­lity and he isn’t concerned by the review, a spokeswoma­n said.
 ?? TYLER ESTEP / TYLER.ESTEP@AJC.COM ?? A $69,000 Dodge Charger Hellcat that the sheriff drives to and from work is parked Wednesday at the Gwinnett County Jail.
TYLER ESTEP / TYLER.ESTEP@AJC.COM A $69,000 Dodge Charger Hellcat that the sheriff drives to and from work is parked Wednesday at the Gwinnett County Jail.

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