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Feds: Disgraced DEA taskforce officer recruited strippers in Shoreline drug trade

neversickanymore

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Feds: Disgraced DEA taskforce officer recruited strippers in Shoreline drug trade takeover attempt
By LEVI PULKKINEN
March 7, 2014

A fired sheriff’s deputy alleged to have stolen drugs while working for the DEA hoped to use a gang of strippers to take over the Shoreline drug trade in suburban Seattle, federal investigators now contend.

Facing a host of state and federal charges, ex-King County Sheriff’s Deputy Mitchell Wright is alleged to have given “free samples” of methamphetamine and heroin to strippers he hoped to recruit in a scheme to remake himself as a drug kingpin.

Adding to the pile of strange allegations against the former Drug Enforcement Administration taskforce officer, investigators contend Wright, 33, began dealing increasing amounts of meth, heroin and cocaine late last year. At the time, Wright was already facing state charges related to allegations that he’d stolen drugs seized during investigations.

In August, Wright was charged in state court with the drug thefts. Released from jail weeks later, Wright was indicted in early February after federal prosecutors accused him of dealing meth; he is now jailed without bail.
Hired by the Sheriff’s Office in November 2002, Wright went to work on a DEA taskforce in 2009. As a taskforce officer, he investigated drug crimes under DEA supervision and was commissioned as a federal officer.

It was while working under DEA supervision that Wright is alleged to have stolen tens of thousands of dollars' worth of drugs. Wright left the Sheriff’s Office in July and was arrested the following month at his Bothell home northeast of Seattle.

Deputy: I’m an Australian diplomat

Wright’s trouble with the law began in May, when a Bothell officer stopped to check on a woman parked at a McDonald’s. Seated behind the Dodge Ram’s wheel, the woman had a hypodermic needle in her arm and appeared to be injecting heroin.

As it turned out, the truck was registered to Wright and the woman was his roommate and informant, according to charging papers.

The incident prompted an internal investigation, during which deputies found bags of heroin marked with DEA evidence numbers in the trunk of Wright’s cruiser, a King County detective said in state court papers.

Charged in August with felony theft and heroin possession, Wright was alleged to have stolen 1,600 oxycodone pills, a half-pound of benzodiazepine and about a teaspoon of cocaine. The street value of those drugs is estimated by authorities at $36,450 to $52,490; investigators contend each oxycodone pill could sell for $20 to $30.

Wright made a series of outlandish claims following his arrest, including asserting that he was immune to prosecution as an Australian diplomat, a King County detective told the court.

“He also stated that he had a job lined up in Australia that was going to pay him $400,000 a year and that he had terminal bone cancer and only had six months to live,” the detective said in state court filings. “He then continued that this investigation was one big misunderstanding.”

Having posted bond, Wright was released from King County Jail two weeks after his arrest. King County Sheriff John Urquhart later fired him, a necessary step to see that Wright’s police officer certification was invalidated.

Now facing federal charges related to the purported drug thefts, investigators claim Wright kept using and selling heroin after his arrest.

Stripper recruits, prostitute customers

Late last year, King County detectives spotted Wright at the home of a suspected drug dealer. Urquhart said he went to the DEA for assistance because Wright knew his undercover officers by sight; a joint investigation followed.

In court papers, a State Patrol detective assigned to a DEA taskforce said an informant told investigators Wright was recruiting strippers to sell meth and heroin for him. Wright, they were told, was giving “free samples” to North Seattle strippers and hoped to take over the Shoreline-area drug trade.

Free from jail, Wright was also using large amounts of meth and becoming paranoid, the detective continued in a recently unsealed search warrant affidavit. Still, though, Wright believed he wouldn’t be apprehended.

“Wright bragged to (the informant) and his criminal associates that he could never be caught or arrested, as he knew all of the tricks that police use to investigate drug dealers,” the detective said in court papers.

Investigators set up a series of undercover drug buys from Wright, who delivered meth by motorcycle, the detective continued.

Wright is also alleged to have been selling cocaine and heroin to prostitutes. The detective said Wright bragged in text messages to one woman that he had “super crazy coke” for her.

Indictment follows combative arrest

Investigators came to believe Wright was living in the basement apartment of an $800,000 home in Seattle’s Cedar Park neighborhood while driving a Chevrolet Monte Carlo with custom wheels. (Strangely enough, Denzel Washington drove a similarly tricked-out Monte Carlo while playing a dirty detective in 2001’s “Training Day.”)

A federal grand jury indicted Wright on Feb. 5, adding federal drug charges to the state theft charges currently outstanding. He was arrested five days later at a Kidd Valley restaurant on Aurora Avenue North.

Confronted outside the burger joint, Wright tussled with officers and attempted to toss away an eyeglasses case stuffed with meth, cocaine and heroin, the detective said in the search warrant affidavit. Describing Wright as “argumentative, verbally assaultive and … extremely agitated,” the detective said Wright appeared to be high on meth at the time of his arrest.

Wright went on to claim he’d been “screwed over” by the Sheriff’s Office and had done nothing wrong except “fall in love and sleep with an informant who is a good person,” the detective continued. Investigators contend Wright admitted to selling drugs, claiming he was left with no other options after his firing.

According to the detective’s account, Wright went on to say he would “beat any case,” in part because he’d been trading drugs for sex with one government witness. Wright contended the woman couldn’t be called to testify against him because they were sleeping together.

“He added that the DEA was a joke and reiterated that law enforcement should go after the real criminals, because what he had been doing was really nothing,” the detective said in court papers.

Investigators claim to have recovered meth and counterfeit bills from Wright’s car, as well as meth and steroids from his apartment.

Having pleaded not guilty to the federal drug charges he currently faces, Wright remains jailed at the Federal Detention Center at SeaTac. His trial is currently scheduled to begin in late April, though it will likely be delayed.

http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/Feds-Disgraced-DEA-taskforce-officer-recruited-5295054.php
 
http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2021652344_deputyarrestedxml.html

Originally published August 20, 2013 at 8:06 PM | Page modified August 21, 2013 at 1:30 PM

$250,000 bail set for ex-deputy held in drug-theft case
Former King County sheriff’s Deputy Mitchell Wright, 33, of Bothell, resigned from the Sheriff’s Office on July 9 after he became the subject of on ongoing internal investigation into his unauthorized use of federal criminal-justice databases, Sheriff John Urquhart said.

By Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporter


A King County District Court judge on Tuesday set bail at $250,000 for a former King County sheriff’s deputy who was arrested on Monday for allegedly stealing drugs seized during undercover investigations while he was assigned to a federal narcotics task force.

Mitchell Wright, 33, of Bothell, resigned from the Sheriff’s Office on July 9 after he became the subject of an ongoing internal investigation into his unauthorized use of federal criminal-justice databases, Sheriff John Urquhart said during an interview Tuesday. Though that investigation is still open, Urquhart said that if the policy violation were sustained, it would have led to Wright’s firing.

Wright was placed on administrative leave on July 3, and two deputies went to his house that day to retrieve the patrol car that had been assigned to him, according to the probable-cause statement outlining the police case against him.

The deputies found three plastic bags of heroin in the trunk with evidence tags indicating the drugs had been seized during two federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) investigations, the statement says. Wright was assigned to a DEA narcotics task force from 2009 to February of this year.

The discovery of the heroin prompted a second internal investigation that uncovered Wright’s alleged criminal conduct, the statement says. Drugs seized during investigations that don’t result in federal prosecutions are turned over to individual officers, who are then required to enter the drugs into their own agency’s evidence system, the statement says.

Wright, who was working undercover, is accused of failing to enter drugs released to him by the DEA into evidence with the Sheriff’s Office, the statement says. The street value of the drugs Wright allegedly stole is estimated at between $36,500 and $52,490.

During Wright’s first court appearance Tuesday, Judge Pro Tem Lisa Napoli-O’Toole found probable cause to hold Wright on investigation of first-degree theft, first-degree possession of stolen property, tampering with evidence and possession of controlled substances.

She ordered the media not to photograph Wright’s face because of concerns that identifying him could endanger other undercover agents he worked with who still are involved in investigations that Wright participated in before his resignation.

Napoli-O’Toole also said she considered Wright a flight risk, citing a statement he allegedly made to his landlord indicating he planned to move to Australia in two weeks. She ordered Wright to surrender his passport and any documents associated with his undercover identity.

Wright’s defense attorney, Jeff Kradel, had requested that Wright be released on personal recognizance, saying his client’s passport is expired and he has no means to leave the country. Kradel also said Wright had already turned over his undercover documents to law enforcement.

Wright’s father, Michael Wright Sr., also asked for his son’s release. The elder Wright, who identified himself as a retired, 24-year veteran DEA agent, said his son was “always very respectful of authority,” was a “hard worker” and “did an outstanding job” while employed with the Sheriff’s Office.

However, Napoli-O’Toole agreed with the state’s bail request, saying Wright’s “incentive to flee in this case is high” and that his possible access to “federally created” alternative identification documents was concerning to her.

The investigation into Wright’s conduct began after a Bothell police officer contacted a woman inside a pickup parked outside a McDonald’s restaurant at 2 a.m. on May 25, according to the probable-cause statement. The officer peered through a window and saw that the woman had a needle stuck in her arm, and believed she was shooting heroin, it says.

The 25-year-old woman told the officer the truck belonged to Wright and said she was his live-in girlfriend who also worked as an informant for Wright, the statement says.

Court records show the woman has been charged with several drug- and alcohol-related crimes and has been charged twice this year with driving with a suspended license and failing to install a court-ordered ignition-interlock device on her vehicle.

As a result of the woman’s arrest in Bothell, “We just started looking at (Wright’s) laptop,” Urquhart said.

Sheriff’s officials determined he was “accessing government computers for nongovernment purposes,” Urquhart said.

“We expected termination to be coming down the pike and I have to assume that he knew it was coming,” Urquhart said of Wright’s July 9 resignation. “We can’t keep somebody from resigning, and if our investigation isn’t completed yet, we can’t fire you.”

Urquhart said there is no information suggesting Wright was selling drugs.

Most of the drugs Wright kept instead of booking into evidence were oxycodone pills, according to the probable-cause statement.

King County sheriff’s Detective Timothy Gillette wrote that Wright told of “keeping the drugs that he knew were for an investigation and burying them in the woods behind his home,” the statement says. Wright used a FedEx box to transport the drugs, and the box was found in his recycling bin, it says.

The statement notes that no drugs were found inside the box, but does not say whether any drugs were recovered from the woods.

In response to a public-disclosure request, the Sheriff’s Office on Tuesday released portions of Wright’s personnel file, which show that he has never before been disciplined for misconduct. Instead, his file is filled with letters of commendation, recognizing him for pro-active police work, compassionate dealings with crime victims and investigative skills.

Wright was named the 2006 Deputy of the Year for helping reduce auto thefts in Shoreline and for “exposing several drug houses,” according to a May 2007 letter signed by then-Sheriff Sue Rahr that is included in his file.

Seattle Times news researcher Miyoko Wolf contributed to this report
 
I hope that scumbag gets every max sentence for the charges. Cops suck as it is, but this doucher is prob just one of many that really have no business being a cop.
 
“He added that the DEA was a joke and reiterated that law enforcement should go after the real criminals, because what he had been doing was really nothing,” the detective said in court papers.

Gotta love this comment though.
 
Gotta love this comment though.
Especially when taken together with his other perfectly sensible statements.

I think this description hits the proverbial nail on the head, “argumentative, verbally assaultive and … extremely agitated,”.

I hope that scumbag gets every max sentence for the charges. Cops suck as it is, but this doucher is prob just one of many that really have no business being a cop.
Clearly a guy who has lost his mind from methamphetamine. Hopefully he can stay clean in prison and get his life turned around following his release.
 
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