Current:Home > InvestEx-North Carolina sheriff’s convictions over falsifying training records overturned -Visionary Growth Labs
Ex-North Carolina sheriff’s convictions over falsifying training records overturned
View
Date:2025-04-19 19:57:59
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina appeals court on Tuesday overturned a former county sheriff’s fraud and obstruction convictions, declaring allegations related to falsifying his firearms training requirements didn’t meet the necessary elements for those crimes.
A three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals vacated the convictions against Brindell Wilkins on six counts of obstruction of justice and also reversed a trial judge’s decision refusing to dismiss six counts of obtaining property by false pretenses, for which a jury also found him guilty in December 2022. The ruling comes seven months after a subordinate to Wilkins had his obstruction convictions related to the training overturned.
Wilkins, the Granville County sheriff for 10 years until 2019, was sentenced from six to 17 months behind bars. Last year, Wilkins pleaded guilty to other charges unrelated to the allegations and received another prison sentence. State correction records show Wilkins was projected to be released from a state prison on Dec. 23.
The 2022 convictions stemmed from accusations that Wilkins falsified records to make it appear he completed the annual in-service firearm training required of most certified law enforcement officers and met qualifications to carry a firearm. A sheriff isn’t required to maintain certification or complete the training requirements, Tuesday’s opinion said.
Still, over several years in the 2010s, Wilkins reported to the North Carolina Sheriffs’ Education and Training Standards Division that he had completed the training and classes when he hadn’t done so. A 2019 investigation of the Granville sheriff department found that Wilkins’ signatures on class rosters had been falsified.
Chad Coffey, a former Granville deputy on trial on similar obstruction counts, was the course instructor. Coffey doctored records and fabricated firearms scores for Wilkins and the sheriff’s chief deputy at their urging, according to evidence at his early 2022 trial.
At his own trial, Wilkins acknowledged he had not completed the training or requalification since becoming sheriff, and testified he submitted the false records for “a personal reason” and that he “wanted to get credit for it,” Tuesday’s opinion said.
Court of Appeals Judge Toby Hampson, writing the unanimous opinion, agreed with Wilkins that prosecutors had failed to prove that fraud was committed.
The count of obtaining property by false pretenses requires a false representation occurred that deceives so that “one person obtains or attempts to obtain value from another.” But Hampson wrote nothing was obtained because the sheriff already had received certification to become a law enforcement officer when he was previously a sheriff’s deputy.
“We conclude that renewing a previously acquired law enforcement certification does not constitute obtaining property,” Hampson said.
As for the felony obstruction of justice charges, Hampson relied heavily on the February opinion he also wrote that overturned Coffey’s convictions.
At that time, Hampson wrote obstruction of justice requires intent for “the purpose of hindering or impeding a judicial or official proceeding or investigation or potential investigation, which might lead to a judicial or official proceeding.”
He said there were no facts asserted in Coffey’s indictment to support the charge that his actions were designed to subvert a future investigation or proceeding. The same held true with Wilkins’ “nearly identical indictment,” Hampson wrote on Tuesday.
Court of Appeals Judges Hunter Murphy and April Wood joined in Hampson’s opinion. The state Supreme Court could agreed to hear Tuesday’s decision on appeal. But the justices earlier this year already declined to take on Coffey’s case, even though both attorneys for the state and Coffey asked them to do so.
In October 2023, Wilkins pleaded guilty to several other counts related in part to allegations of improper evidence practices and that he urged someone to kill another former deputy.
veryGood! (66)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Bill Maher says Real Time to return, but without writers
- Bill Maher's 'Real Time' returns amid writers' strike, drawing WGA, Keith Olbermann criticism
- California schools join growing list of districts across the country banning Pride flags
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Enough to make your skin crawl: 20 rattlesnakes found inside a homeowner’s garage in Arizona
- EU faces deadline on extending Ukrainian grain ban as countries threaten to pass their own
- Pope’s Ukraine peace envoy raises stalled Black Sea grain exports in Beijing talks
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- NASA UAP report finds no evidence of extraterrestrial UFOs, but some encounters still defy explanation
Ranking
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Drew Barrymore stalking suspect trespasses at fashion show looking for Emma Watson, police say
- 'I'm a grown man': Deion Sanders fires back at Colorado State coach Jay Norvell's glasses remark
- Drea de Matteo says she joined OnlyFans after her stance against vaccine mandates lost her work
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Why Demi Lovato Felt She Was in Walking Coma Years After Her Near-Fatal 2018 Overdose
- Aaron Rodgers' injury among 55 reasons cursed Jets' Super Bowl drought will reach 55 years
- China economic data show signs slowdown may be easing, as central bank acts to support growth
Recommendation
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
GOP candidate’s wife portrays rival’s proposed pay raise for school personnel as unfeasible
How hard will Hurricane Lee hit New England? The cold North Atlantic may decide that
Dustin Johnson says he would be a part of Ryder Cup team if not for LIV Golf defection
Sam Taylor
Slot machines and phone lines still down after MGM cyberattack Sunday. What to expect.
Anitta Reveals What's Holding Her Back From Having a Baby
Majority-Black school districts have far less money to invest in buildings — and students are feeling the impact