Friday, November 1, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Friday, November 1, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven The sheriff's problems with law and order (Continued from Page 1) vassing Washtenaw County. Har-, vey told them he was goinng to print -his own Safety Guide. '' Harvey replied to the supervis- ors' question, under oath: "No," he had not diverted any monies from the Safety Guide to his per- sonal use. l But Wednesday night at a can- didates forum in Ypsilanti, Har- vey told the audience he declared "a profit" from the safety guide on his income tax forms. He added that the $500 profit from the booklet did not go to himself but to the Junior Depu- ties Association. (The association is a group of high school and jun- for high school students supported by the county to encourage obed- ience to the law. Sgt. Robert Britton sponsors the group.) Last April, however, Britton told The Daily, "We get no funds from the safety guide." In his Oct. 4 reply to the super- visors, Harvey said: "The money (for the Safety Guide) was never received or ear-marked or co-min- gled with any account connecting or adjoining ,with the county of Washtenaw." But Koch told The Daily yester- day: "I have a check dated Oct. 12, 1967, from an Ann Arbor building company for $30 made out to the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department for adver- tising in the safety guide booklet. It is endorsed by the Sheriff's De- partment for deposit in the °safety guide account." Since Harvey's predecessor, George A. Peterson, took office in 1963, and until several months ago, the County Jail operated a, commissary. the commissary sold candy bars, cigarettes and other, materials to the prisoners. Be- fore Harvey took office, the money for the commissary was handled, by Deputy Harold Ewald. Ewald purchased the materials from a re- tail store and sold them for a nominal profit. The small profit from the store at that time was used for the jail's "flower fund" - a fund used- to buy flowers for deputies who were ill or for relatives of deputies who were ill. The profit from the com- missary totalled about $100 per year, Harvey claimed. In January, 1067, the operation was turned over to Sgt. Kenneth Schultz. Harvey says Schultz be- gan to purchase materials from a wholesaler, the Ann A r b o r To- bacco Co. and thus, has made a larger profit from the store. Harvey says the increased pro- transported from the state prison in Jackson, where he was serving another sentence, to the County Jail. Supervisor Bent Nielsen (R- Ann Arbor) claimed Harvey was told, "He was to keep Threat in the tightest of security." In mid-November Harvey per- sonally designated Threat and an- other prisoner, Hector Osorio, trustees. As trustees they were able to leave the jail, dumping garbage and occassionally assigned to "grounds upkeep detail" during the day. Osorio had been in jail 16 times and was awaiting sentencing for charges of forgery and pasing bad checks. On Nov. 26, Threat and Osorio walked out of the jail and escaped. They'stayed in Detroit three days. Threat then went to California and Osorio went to Phoenix, Ariz. Several weeks later Threat killed a man in California. He is n o w serving his sentence. Osorio was arrested by FBI agents in spring, 1968, on a charge of transporting stolen cars across state lines. Harvey has also come under attack for the expense of his ex-, tradition trips. In extraditing Osorio, Harvey and Hollis left for Tuscon, Ariz., Friday, May 3, 1968. They spent much of the weekend, according to the Ypsilanti Press, in Nogales, Mexico. Monday, Os- orio was extradited. Harvey charg- ed the county almost $1,500 for the trip. Harvey charged the supervisors $550 for attending the 1967 sheriff's convention in Las Vegas. He claims on his expense account that he and his wife attended the i conference. He had previously told the supervisors he was accompan- ied not by his wife but by Under- sheriff Harold J. Owings Jr. The supervisors investigated the mat- ter and found that Owings had never left Ann Arbor. Subsequent investigation by the supervisors showed that Harvey's wife also did not accompany' Harvey on the Las Vegas trip. In February, Harvey came un- der attack for the county jail's incorrigible cell - an 88-inch by 66-inch cell without bed or drain - "for prisoners who assault an officer, fight with or sexually at- tack other prisoners, or destroy county property." The State Department of Cor- rections ordered the sheriff to close the cell in March. Other incidents occurring in the jail and recorded in court records include acts of sodomy, hanging and torture by prisoners to other prisoners. Several weeks ago, Koch, who is now a part-time police officer inl Dexter, ticketed Deputy K i n g Williams III for speeding in Dex- ter. Harvey reportedly appeared before the Dexter village board and demanded that Koch be fired. Sources say he threatened to cut off radio communications between the Dexter police and the Sheriff's Department unless Koch was fired. The village board refused to fire \Koch and Harvey silenced com- munications for 80 hours. Harvey has also received harsh criticism for the driving records of his force. Though county police car accidents have "substantially" declined this year, County Audi- tor J. Martin Rempp claims the record of Harvey's first several years in office nearly caused revo- cation of all police accident insur- ance. That provoked the board in Au- gust, 1966, to request a special high speed driving course be taught to patrolmen. Harvey told the 'board, "I'm afraid the gentlemen on the board are trying to catch a gust of wind in a bag. "What they're asking to be taught can't be taught." One month later Harvey an- nounced the opening of "the first high speed police pursuit school" in the country. The school was held on a quarter-mile roadway in Ann Arbor's Research Park. But Maj. Edward W. Jones of the North Carolina State Highway Patrol said there have been at least two and perhaps three, high- speed pursuit schools in the coun- try before Harvey's. Jones, head of the highway patrol's training division in Raleigh, questioned whether a quarter-mile roadway was suffi- cient length for a high-speed pur- suit school. Jones says his department uses "an 8,000-foot strip so our men can be experienced in 100 and 120 m.p.h. driving." He claims, "You would be very limited in a quarter mile track." After several months of the school, Supervisor Albert Breder- nitz (R-Saline) called Harvey's school, "a bunch of humbug." "They just like to go racing around," he said. IMPORTED GIFTS FROM * AFRICA. * ASIA. 1 " EUROPE e THE MEDINA SHOP 402 Maynard St. 663-4540 -Daily-Andy Sacks Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey fit is used for the flower fund, re- placement of "any , prisoner's money that may have been lost" and ",used for purchasing equip- ment for the countty jail, s.uch as air conditioners .- He also claims some of the money was used to buy uniforms for the Junior Deputies. M o r e than $520, he further claims, was paid in sales tax during 1967. The Daily has obtained photo- stats of receipts for money taken from the jail store profit f r o m Jan. 12, 1967 to Jan. 15, 1968. The receipts all state: "Received from Sgt. Schultz" and are signed by Harvey, Capt. Irving C. Hollis, Britton and others. ;n.The receipts total $1,683.65. Harvey signed personally for $1,045: Of this money, all but $65 is marked: "Donation from jail store fund." Thirty dollars is marked: "For Horse Show." t None of the money is marked: "Four air conditioners." Robert Harrison, chairman of the county board of supervisors, told T h e Daily, "The funds for the air con- ditioners were paid from the county's general fund." 'Britton signed for $460 from the' fund. All the money is de- signated: "For use in the flower fund." Harvey's personal secretary, Jane DeVine, signed for $10. The money was marked: "For dona- tion." Hollis received $36, marked: "Lunch for Junior Deputies." Other monies taken from the fund include $40, marked: "For TV set repairs;" and six dollars, marked: "For inmates lunch at driving range." In November, 1967, a state pri- son inmate, Tommie Threat, was charged with armed robbery and "WONDERFULNESS"** ... 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