News
Release
Date:
November 2, 2006
Contact: DEA Public Affairs
Number: (202) 307-7977
Sheriff,
12 Deputies Among Those Arrested On Drug,
Racketeering Charges In Southern VA County
20 Defendants Charged With Stealing Guns, Obstructing Justice,
and Selling Drugs
NOV
2 -- (WASHINGTON
D.C.) – The Drug Enforcement Administration announced the arrest
of 16 defendants, including Henry County Sheriff Harold Cassell, in
the culmination of a five-year investigation into a major drug, weapons,
and money laundering operation which also involved several current
and former law enforcement officials. Four individuals remain at-large.
A major break in
the case came as a result of Operation
Cyber Chase when in 2005, DEA agents made a controlled delivery
of 2 kilograms of ketamine to defendants in Henry County.
According to the
48-count indictment returned by the Grand Jury in Abingdon, Virginia,
20 defendants, including Sheriff Cassell, have been charged for their
roles in a racketeering conspiracy that included the distribution of
illegal drugs, theft of drugs and firearms under the custody of the
Henry County Sheriff’s Office, money laundering, and obstruction
of justice. Thirteen of the defendants are current or former employees
of the Henry County, Virginia Sheriff’s Office.
“As a public
servant, I am deeply disturbed by the actions of these individuals,
especially the law enforcement officers arrested today,” said
Shawn A. Johnson, Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s
Washington D.C. Division. “Those who betray the public trust
insult the integrity and honor of all police officers who risk their
lives upholding the law. DEA joins with the Virginia State Police,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the United States Postal Inspection
Service to send a clear message that their disgraceful acts will never
be tolerated.”
“The members
of this conspiracy took advantage of the trust placed in them as law
enforcement officers. Their illegal activities included drug distribution,
money laundering, and stealing property that was in the custody of
the Henry County Sheriff’s Office. Then, when they were confronted
by investigators, the defendants lied in an attempt to cover their
tracks,” said United States Attorney John Brownlee.
According to the
indictment, since 1998, sworn officers, employees, and associates of
the Henry County Sheriff’s Office engaged in a continuous scheme
to distribute the date rape drug Ketamine, cocaine, crack and marijuana.
Members of the conspiracy would use their connections with the Sheriff’s
Department to obtain these drugs and to avoid arrest. Members also
allegedly took firearms for their own personal use that were seized
by and under the custody of the Henry County Sheriff’s Office.
The indictment
alleges that Cassell was advised by authorities of the drug transactions
going on in his department but he chose not to take any action. Furthermore,
it is charged that Cassell covered up several of the illegal activities
by making false statements to federal investigators and by adding and
abetting the money laundering aspect of the operation.
In addition to Cassell,
a deputy who served as a school resource officer, the supervisor of
a vice unit, and a canine handler were also arrested.
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