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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Shock,
anger greet news of Brown
Greg Brown had
a lot of supporters in his hometown of Sisters.
Through two bruising election
campaigns for Sheriff in 1996 and 2000 -- even in the face of state and
federal investigations and rumors of wrongdoing -- many in Sisters continued
to believe in Greg Brown, a career lawman and long-time president of the
local fire district board.
That belief was shattered
by Brown's admission in federal court on Wednesday, October 16, that he
had systematically embezzled some $575,000 from the sheriff's office and
Sisters-Camp Sherman Rural Fire Protection District over a period of years.
"I was shocked," said former
Deschutes County Sheriff's Sergeant Rich Shawver. "Frankly, I wanted to
believe in the man -- I did believe in the man -- right up until yesterday.
"I'm shocked, saddened and
angered all at once," Shawver said.
Shawver, who ran the Sisters
sheriff's substation before his retirement two years ago, considered Brown
"the greatest administrator I ever worked for."
That's still Shawver's opinion.
"I still really believe that
today," Shawver said. "He gave me the tools I needed to do my job and
he left me alone to do my job."
For a long time, Shawver believed
that the investigations and rumored allegations were the work of political
enemies -- of which Brown had his share.
"I really put a lot of it
on politics," Shawver said. "I put a heck of a lot of it on politics."
But the allegations turned
out to be true and the reality of Brown's criminality cast a stain upon
any good work that he did as sheriff and with the Sisters-Camp Sherman
RFPD.
"I personally feel like everybody
else -- betrayed by it," said Sisters Fire Chief Don Rowe.
The scope of the betrayal
was breathtaking. Brown took opportunities to steal large amounts and
small and took advantage of his control of the district's books to artfully
cover his tracks.
"At the beginning (of the
investigation) when I saw how much it was I was surprised at the amount
and how long it went on," Rowe said.
Brown's theft of $403,431.49
from the Sisters-Camp Sherman RFPD occurred at the same time Brown was
writing grants and planning equipment purchases that helped the RFPD become
one of the best-equipped and best-trained emergency services organizations
in the region.
For some, the good that Brown
did for the district even as he systematically diverted funds and lined
his pockets helps define the tragic irony of Brown's downfall.
"If he'd just used his talent
straight all the way along, there would be no problem and he would be
loved," said long-time RFPD board member Chan Cathcart of Camp Sherman.
Some now wonder whether Brown's
public service was ever motivated by anything other than the opportunity
to steal. Others now question their own judgment after believing so strongly
in a man's character and finding out that it was so badly bent. |
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