“Nineteen firearms listed on the Police Department’s evidence log were not found during the inventory,”
April 15,2022
Alabama auditors today issued a scathing report on the town of Brookside, detailing haphazard treatment of evidence, missing guns, unexplained extra guns, an unmarked trash bag filled with prescription medicines, undocumented stacks of cash and evidence crammed into storage wherever it would fit.
“Nineteen firearms listed on the Police Department’s evidence log were not found during the
inventory,” the report said. “Additionally, the inventory revealed sixty-three firearms and numerous ammunition magazines in police custody that were not listed on the Police Department’s evidence logs provided.”
The audit by the Alabama Examiners of Public Accounts began Feb. 22 at the request of Lt. Gov. Will Ainsworth, after revelations about the tiny town’s policing were published by AL.com.
The audit says guns were “carelessly tossed into bins and randomly stored in cabinets inside the evidence closet.” The audit included pictures to depict evidence in disarray.
State examiners also found poor financial safeguards by the town, the police department and its municipal court, as examiners came to a list of harsh conclusions.
They include:
- The town did not have adequate policies and procedures to sufficiently address the daily operations.
- There were no inventory records to ensure evidence collected by the police department was accounted for.
- Cash bonds were not being recorded and deposited properly.
- The municipal court did not have written policies in place to ensure compliance with the Alabama Rules of Judicial Administration.
- Brookside did not ensure that all amounts collected were for offenses included in Brookside’s own ordinances, and there was no assurance that ordinances were consistently applied.
- Brookside did not ensure compliance with the state bid law when it awarded a no-bid contract to its towing company, Jett Towing.
- “Further, the cash collected as evidence was not always labeled properly. Some cash had to be recounted for accuracy because the amount labeled on the envelope did not agree with the amount shown on the evidence log,” it said.
In a statement today, Brookside Mayor Mike Bryan said the town welcomed the audit report.
“This report is a good thing,” he said. “It lets us know what we need to improve. Our objective will continue to be to promote confidence in local government through transparent practices and respectful interactions with town employees and elected officials.”
The report, however, found many trouble spots.
Counterfeit money was found in the evidence closet, though law enforcement agencies are supposed to turn it in to the U.S. Secret Service.
Evidence labeled for the same case was found scattered into different locations, and a trash bag filled with prescription pill bottles was found in the evidence closet.
“While the pill bottles did not appear to be related to a case, they were in the custody of the Police Department,” the audit report says. “However, there were no instructions or labeling on the bag regarding a reason it was being held or disposition of the pill bottles.”
Drivers have claimed that police took their prescribed medication and never returned it.
The report found numerous problems with evidence and guns.
“Items in custody of the Police Department were found to be stored in a disorganized or chaotic manner,” it said. “A firearm listed as evidence was found inside a safe housing the Police Department’s firearms,.. Items appeared to be placed wherever space could be found inside the evidence closet.”
The audit report notes that in October of 2021 the Brookside town council approved a number of guns to be sent to an entity called Gulf States for assessment.
“It was determined that no firearms were sold to Gulf States in October 2021, but firearms were sold to Gulf States on April 17, 2020. It was noted, five of the firearms sold to Gulf States in April of 2020 were still shown on the Police Department’s evidence log as on-hand.”
Brookside Interim Police Chief Henry Irby, who was hired in February, said in the statement that he has been working to address problems with evidence and protocols.
“We are well aware of the things we need to address and have been actively doing so,” he said.
That statement — see the full release below — says Irby has since collected all firearms the audit could not account for.
Brookside’s court has been suspended since AL.com described how the town built a fearsome police force that came to supply half the town’s revenue through fines and fees. Court will resume April 28. Former Police Chief Mike Jones resigned and much of the police force resigned or was let go.
“The Town of Brookside is grateful for the suggestions to improve Brookside’s financial practices,” the town statement today said. “Every town has room to develop and implement better protocols to ensure the proper handling of public funds.”
Brookside audit by John Archibald on Scribd