Former Mooresville Police Chief John Crone has been indicted by a state grand jury, the Report has learned from a number of sources this week.
The charges are unknown at this time because the indictment was apparently ordered sealed. That means the charges will not be public record until the indictment is served.
Nearly two years have passed since questions were first posted here about Crone’s Cops for Kids organization (http://thegattonreport.blogspot.com/2008/06/what-is-cops-for-kids.html). Within a week after the Report and The Mooresville Tribune exposed questions about, and discrepancies in, the Cops for Kids financial records – including a $361 deposit of “loose change from the evidence room” into the Cops for Kids account – the Town of Mooresville asked the DA's Office to bring in the SBI to investigate. And within the month, Crone was suspended, then fired.
What is not as clear is why the indictment issued early this week was sealed, and why it apparently hasn’t yet been served. Current and former members of the law-enforcement community indicated to the Report this week that it’s common practice for the judicial system to allow current/former government officials – and even some private citizens – to turn themselves in, as opposed to being shamed by an official serving of an indictment.
The Iredell County Sheriff’s Office will reportedly be responsible for serving the indictment.
We’ll keep you posted as more information becomes available.
Less than 24 hours after Robert Goforth went public with his recent experience with the Iredell County Sheriff’s Office, he was hand-delivered a $3,715 county check from the sheriff's right-hand man, Chief Deputy Rick Dowdle.
Goforth also received an apology – but not before being lambasted by the chief deputy himself.
Dowdle showed up at Goforth’s house, unannounced, Thursday morning, being driven by another man whose identity is unknown. In Dowdle's hand was a county check for $3,715 – restitution for the sheriff’s office destroying Goforth’s property in violation of state law (http://thegattonreport.blogspot.com/2010/04/evidence-room-error-destroys-property.html)
“I got this check for you,” Dowdle said to Goforth, “but I’m a little disappointed this turned into being a political thing.”
“I’m just disappointed that it turned out … why somebody take this and … I don’t know that you had anything to do with it … but somebody take this and turns this into a political situation that they don’t know what they’re talking about,” stammered Dowdle. “And that bothers me.
“I wouldn’t think that you would back something like that without being man enough to come and look me in the face and explain the situation to me,” the chief deputy said to Goforth. “Now am I right or wrong?”
Interestingly, however, when Goforth asked Dowdle later in the conversation – a link to which can be accessed on this page – if he could “go to the person that destroyed [his property] and ask them myself why they did such a foolish thing,” Dowdle refused to provide names. “Well, I’m not going to give out the names for that because I’m not going to get them involved in this,” Dowdle said.
Oftentimes stuttering and not completing his sentences, Dowdle apologized that Goforth’s property had been destroyed. But each apology was followed by yet another tongue-lashing. “I’m sorry; this don’t happen. We don’t do this,” Dowdle said, interrupting Goforth and talking over him. “If you go to the finance office, I don’t go write restitution checks for property that we get destroyed because that ain’t the way we do business.
“But when things get strung out to other people, and get misled, that’s what bothers me,” the chief deputy continued, adding: “I hope you understand that cause that’d be just like me turning around and writing something about you that, you know, that aint the way you do business. And that’s why it bothers me.”
At one particular point in the conversation, Dowdle sounded sympathetic toward Goforth. The chief deputy explained that while he cannot account for the items that were destroyed, he said one possible explanation is that the evidence room had been moved. “We moved to a different building,” he said. “Some of this stuff could’ve got put into some things that got destroyed. I don’t know that. But it could have been a mistake.”
Dowdle said “the paperwork had marked it being destroyed. When we found the paperwork – when you brought it up – that’s when I got involved.
“Understand,” said Dowdle, “I ain’t been involved in this but a couple weeks. I don’t know how far this thing goes back, but I think it goes back quite a bit of time.”
However, said Dowdle, “I don’t think somebody would’ve took the artifacts like that … the common sense person … gonna take artifacts like that and just destroy them.”
Dowdle said he had recently ordered Det. Poteat to look into how and why the items were destroyed. “That don’t make no sense to me,” Dowdle said. “Why would you go out here a destroy a steam engine? That don’t make no sense to me because I got ‘em myself.”
But once again, any apology – or any attempt by Dowdle to treat Goforth like the victim he is – was short-lived. “I’m a good person, and I’m sure you are, too,” said the chief deputy, “but it just disappointed me that I hear that somebody took that information and sent it to somewhere that has totally nothing to do with this situation.
“Rumors makes in for a bad situation,” Dowdle said. “I’m not a man that deals with rumors. You put facts in front of me. And I would think you’d be the kind of a person that wouldn’t go off of rumors, too,” the chief deputy said to Goforth.
“You got problems, come and talk to me,” Dowdle continued. “I don’t like somebody going around saying this or saying that. I can come and tell you 10,000 things, but, you know, unless you got the facts in front of you, that bothers me.”
“And, you know, the sheriff don’t … I assure you … we don’t go around just destroying peoples’ property,” Dowdle said, chuckling. “It don’t work like that. We’ve been in office too long for that to happen.”
Dowdle continued: “I don’t go on these blogs and stuff that gets throwed out there. I’ve never had the opportunity to come and talk to you and then I hear that my name’s getting throwed around that I won’t pay you. And that was totally not the fact.”
Dowdle did not elaborate on who, exactly, has stated that he would not pay Goforth.
Continued Dowdle: “This is an election time; you know that. People’s picking up every little rock they can throw left and right. Has any of them people throwed any rocks come and stood in front of me? No. What does that tell you?”
“I’ll leave it at that,” Dowdle said.
Though Dowdle said he had been involved Goforth’s case for “a couple weeks,” Goforth said Thursday’s visit was the first contact he had received from any top-ranking official with the sheriff’s office. To date, he still has not heard from the sheriff, Phil Redmond.
County finance director Susan Blumenstein said today that the county check for Mr. Goforth was from “sales proceeds from items sold through the Jail Commissary to inmates.” In other words, she said, “no taxpayer funds were used to make the payment.”
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This blog was created to foster open, uncensored dialogue among and between Mooresville/South Iredell residents. Have an opinion? I want to hear it. It's simple to do. At the end of every blog entry is a "Comments" link. Click on it, and type away. You even have the option of commenting anonymously. And, of course, if you wanna rap with me, or want me to look into something, e-mail me at jaimegatton@gmail.com.
I was a newspaper reporter in Mooresville, NC for a decade and covered local government issues from 2003 to 2006. I continued freelancing for a portion of 2007. Here are some of my accomplishments from 2004 to 2006: 3rd Place, Investigative Reporting, 2004, from the N.C. Press Association (NCPA) for series of articles titled, "Library director firing controversy." 3rd Place, Community Service Award (the highest honor the NCPA bestows on a community newspaper), 2004, for series on the Mooresville librarian firing controversy. 3rd Place, Investigative Reporting, from the NCPA in 2005 for series on Mooresville's wastewater treatment plant expansion titled "Something stinks in Mooresville." 3rd Place, Community Service Award, from the NCPA in 2005 for "Something stinks in Mooresville” series. June 2005, "Best News Story" MegAward for outstanding journalism at Media General newspapers for "Wastewater costs: Town outspending most." 1st Place, Community Service, from NCPA in 2006, for series titled "Morrison Plantation: A Deadly Intersection." September 2007, "Best News Story" MegAward for outstanding journalism for "No receipts? No problem. Town pays company's bills anyway."