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Who approved $59K in overtime?
By Ray Gronberg
gronberg@heraldsun.com; 419-6648
DURHAM -- Auditors checking into why a Durham Police Department desk officer received $59,454 in overtime in the last year are looking into who might have authorized the payments, among other questions, City Manager Tom Bonfield said.
The probe, undertaken at Bonfield's order, appears unlikely to be finished this week. Bonfield said auditors have to check months' worth of records, and near the end of the process give the Police Department a chance to respond to their findings.
The manager confirmed Thursday that he selected the Audit Services Department to conduct the probe, rather than the Police Department's internal affairs unit, to assure independence.
"Because this had and has the potential to go substantially through the ranks of the Police Department in terms of who signed off on what and did what, I felt it absolutely essential it be handled independently," he said, adding that the necessary paperwork review also plays to Audit Services' strengths.
Bonfield will meet with the auditors today to receive a progress report.
The probe began earlier this month after a citizens' complaint helped tip administrators at City Hall to the fact that Officer Alesha Robinson-Taylor had received more in overtime last year than she earned in regular pay. As of May 13, her salary was listed at $51,220 a year.
The dollar figure is for the period Sept. 1, 2008, to Aug. 31, 2009, and is for 1,750.5 hours worth of work. That's the equivalent of 33.7 hours' extra work for each week of the year.
One of Bonfield's deputy managers, Wanda Page, said earlier this week that it's at the very least "unusual that one officer would be awarded that amount of overtime or would be required to work that amount of hours."
The next-largest overtime claim in that time was from an officer who recorded 438 hours of extra time.
Robinson-Taylor works in the Police Department's Operations Bureau and oversees towing and the "secondary employment" -- also known as the moonlighting -- of her fellow officers.
She answers within the Police Department to a short and unusually top-heavy chain of command. As of this week, it runs through the Operations Bureau's executive officer, Capt. Charlene Balch, to Deputy Police Chief Beverly Council and Police Chief Jose Lopez.
But Balch wasn't Robinson-Taylor's superior during at least part of the year.
Her predecessor as operations executive officer was former Capt. Ron Evans, police spokeswoman Kammie Michael said, adding late Thursday that she didn't have a specific date for when Balch took over.
The auditors are "looking all the way up to see what signoffs occurred, if signoffs occurred," Bonfield said. "They were directed to look not just at all the justifications, but just who signed off on it, which would have had to have happened for the payroll to be processed."
The manager's approach to the investigation drew praise Thursday from the leader of the N.C. Sheriff Police Alliance, former Durham Police Department Capt. Andy Miller.
Miller said Bonfield had made "absolutely the right call" in having someone outside the department handle the investigation. "We think it's a serious enough issue that it deserves transparency, and the city manager obvious agrees with us," he said.
Miller -- who's now a lieutenant with N.C. Central University's campus police -- said he and other members of his group are interested in seeing what the records say and are reserving judgment until they do.
But "if it turns out to be anything other than a mistake, we'll be very concerned because somebody higher up had to sign off on that kind of overtime," he said.
In that event, "making the lowest person on the totem pole a scapegoat is not going to satisfy, I think, the citizens of this town," Miller added.
Bonfield pledged Thursday to make sure the investigation is done right.
"Rest assured it will be thorough, it will be complete and it will be transparent," he said.


Gold
AHA, I knew it, you're not nuts, you're an orange. That explains it!
HA! I knew it, you're not nuts, you're an orange. That explains it!
I WANT A DETERMIANTION OF PROBABLE CAUSE ON EACH AND EVERY ONE OF THEM FOR ENGAGING IN A CONSPIRACY TO PUT ME IN FEAR AND KEEP ME IN FEAR. Preferably under the Patriot Act...it sure feels like terror from the seat I'm sitting in. Bet there's lots of people in Durham who have felt the terror.
BUT NOTHING WILL HAPPEN UNTIL WE PUT ASIDE OUR FEAR AND STAND UP! Even the good guys have allowed the rot to continue by BEING AFRAID AND NOT SPEAKING.
If you have your own issue, email me at rachel_kindred at yahoo dot com, and I will send you the entire cc list so you can build your own case to turn over to the Feds.
My guess is that sooner rather than later all these political insiders are going to get caught up in the federal fishing net -- the universe of cronies is quite small in Durham and the records will tell the tale. Getting to the records is quite the challenge but I 100% promise you the records will be got and the net will close. As I have said, the idea that all this stuff began and ended with the Duke Lacrosse case is wrong. It went on ten years before and it still goes on today. But I also 100% promise you that this is going to stop with this generation. we've ruined the next generations' economy, healthcare, opportunities and whatever, but I will not allow the cronyism and coverups in Durham -- city and county -- with the enabling of the state to continue. By God, I can't fix the economy but I can defend the rule of law and the US Constitution. Each of us have the power to stop it but each of us must choose to not be afraid, or to be afraid and say what you know anyway. Even the good guys have enabled this rot to continue by their fear and their silence. Nows the time to stand for something, people.