Sheriff Embroiled in Inmate Sex Scandal
A yearlong investigation by prosecutors and law enforcement agents in
Oklahoma has resulted in nearly three dozen felony charges against a
county sheriff who could face up to 467 years in jail if convicted.
Michael Burgess, sheriff in Custer County, Okla., since 1994,
surrendered to state law enforcement agents Wednesday and appeared in
district court to face 35 felony charges, including multiple counts of
rape, forcible oral sodomy, bribery by a public official and perjury.
The charges were announced by James Boring, a district attorney
in Texas County, Okla., who took control of the Burgess investigation
in May 2007 after prosecutors in Custer County cited a conflict of
interest in the case and the state attorney general requested Boring's
involvement.
Information presented in court documents filed in Custer County
District Court Wednesday signed by Boring and an agent for the Oklahoma
State Bureau of Investigation lay out a pattern of alleged criminal
behavior from 2005 to 2007. Burgess allegedly used his power as sheriff
repeatedly to pressure a female employee, inmates and members of his
county's drug court program to pleasure him in exchange for special
treatment.
Burgess offered his official resignation Wednesday, effective
immediately. He was released on $50,000 bond under the condition that
he has no direct or indirect contact with any of the prosecution's 33
witnesses.
Attempts by ABC News to speak to Burgess' attorney Steve Huddleston
were unsuccessful, but Huddleston told The Associated Press that his
client is "anxious to go to court and clear his name."
The documents paint a predatory profile of a sheriff who
authorities say would force inmates under his supervision to perform
oral, vaginal and anal sex in his office, his official sheriff's
vehicle, local motels and hotels, a truck stop, and houses belonging to
inmates and friends.
The
four women named in the court documents who were either inmates or
members of the county's drug program all were promised some type of
leniency or preferential treatment in return for their sexual favors.
The alleged sexual liaisons took place between February 2006
and April 2007, according to court documents. One of the women even
traveled with the sheriff to Oklahoma City in April 2006 to take part
in a "legislative" initiative relating to drug court programs across
the state.
"During the night of their stay at the Biltmore Hotel, Sheriff
[Burgess] directed and required that [the woman] stay with him at the
hotel rather than go with other participants and their counselor for
dinner," according to the probable cause affidavit for the sheriff's
arrest. "Sheriff [Burgess] took [the woman] to his room at the Biltmore
Hotel where he engaged in multiple acts of sexual intercourse with [the
woman] during the night."
On May 21, 2007, however, that same woman failed a drug test that was required as part of her release from jail.
"When she failed the drug screen, she disclosed that she had been
having sex with Sheriff [Burgess] and that he had promised her that he
would protect her and keep her from going back to jail," the documents
stated.
In the hours after the woman told of her sexual history with
the sheriff, authorities say Burgess contacted the woman's cousin — a
female who was also part of the drug court program — and asked her to
remove any DNA evidence, such as a condom, from the woman's house that
might incriminate him. Burgess allegedly promised to have her bother
released from jail in exchange for helping cover up the sexual tryst.
It was the statement by the woman who failed the drug test that triggered the state's involvement.
Another allegation involves a former sheriff's office employee who
accused Burgess of inappropriately touching her at a restaurant, in a
courtroom and while she tried on her sheriff's office uniform.
A federal lawsuit was filed in October after Boring's
investigation began. In the suit, 12 former inmates alleged that the
sheriff's employees had them engage in wet T-shirt contests and offered
cigarettes to women who exposed their breasts.
Burgess,
a former police officer and state government investigator, was
appointed sheriff in 1994 when his predecessor died. He was elected to
the position in 1996 and re-elected in 2000 and 2004.
Burgess is married and a grandfather to eight children,
according to a biography posted on the Custer County Sheriff's Office
official Web site. His listed hobbies include hunting and playing golf.
"Sheriff Burgess always has time to talk with his
constituents," the former sheriff's bio reads, "and would like to
invite them to 'come set a spell' and drink a cup of coffee with him."
The daily population at Custer County Detention and Law
Enforcement Center is about 80 inmates, according the sheriff's office
Web site. The sheriff oversaw a staff that included an undersheriff, 10
deputies, 11 jailors, seven dispatchers and an administrative
assistant.
Custer is a rural county in the western part of Oklahoma with a population of about 25,000 residents.
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Former inmate made sketch of sheriff's home
ARAPAHO, Okla. (AP) - An ex-Custer
County jail inmate's sketch of former Sheriff Mike Burgess' home may be
some of the best evidence federal prosecutors have against the lawman.
Burgess resigned from the position he'd held since 1994 shortly
before he was charged last week with 35 felony counts for allegedly
running a sex slave operation at the jail.
According to a story in The Oklahoman, former inmate Joy Leigh Mason
has accused Burgess of threatening to kick her out of the Custer County
Drug Court program if she didn't have a sexual relationship with him.
Burgess was a voting member of the drug court team.
Mason told state investigators several sexual encounters took place inside his rural home.
According to the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, Mason
provided a rough sketch of the interior of the residence which included
details that could only be known to someone who'd been inside the
residence.
Mason is part of a lawsuit filed in October that spelled out the allegations against Burgess and members of his staff.
Some staffers are still working for the county, but none has been charged.
http://www.kten.com/Global/story.asp?S=8198547
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