LivingToFly said:
Nice article...But what a bunch of idiots.
Well, i'd have to agree that at least *some* of the people in Behtel are idiots.
BETHEL: Off-the-cuff question nets an arrest.
By JOEL GAY
Anchorage Daily News
(Published: November 26, 2003)
A Bethel cop saw an opportunity, took a wild chance and scored Saturday when he talked a local man
into selling him an illegal bottle of vodka.
The bust wouldn't be quite so remarkable except Sgt. Roger Vercelline was in full uniform and driving
his patrol car when the bootlegger agreed to the sale.
"I was dumbfounded," Vercelline said. "I've been doing this (policing) for quite a while and I've never
seen anything like it."
Vercelline was coming out of Bethel's grocery store Saturday evening when he spotted a group of
men loitering outside. Just for the heck of it, the officer walked over and asked if anyone knew where
he might buy a bottle of booze.
"It was a spur-of-the-moment thing," Vercelline said. "We ask everyone if they have information
about bootlegging," which is illegal in Bethel. The community is damp, which makes it legal to import
liquor and possess it, but not to sell it.
To his amazement, Vercelline said, one of the men, Eugene Ayuluk, 44, said he could get what the
officer wanted.
Vercelline couldn't believe his luck, he said. "I'm thinking to myself, 'All right, what do I do now?' "
The officer told Ayuluk to wait, that he would be right back with $80. It took 20 minutes to get the
cash, make copies of the serial numbers on the bills and get back to the store. "He was still there,
which astounded me."
Ayuluk said he would meet Vercelline in 20 minutes with the booze at a designated rendezvous. He
even told the officer to ditch the uniform and cop car, because he was afraid what his friends might
think.
Once again, Vercelline thought he might lose the fish he had hooked on the thinnest of line. "I thought
this guy was going to rip me off. I didn't think he would come back with the jug." But Ayuluk showed
up with a bottle of Monarch vodka, then wanted to go party with the now plainclothes cop.
The party didn't last long. Their first stop was to pick up a member of the Western Alaska Alcohol and
Narcotics Team, who was waiting on the road. "Here's a friend of mine," Vercelline told Ayuluk. "He
wants to go with us."
The second stop was the Alaska State Troopers' office, where the two cops announced the bad news.
"We told him, 'We tricked you. Now you're going to jail,' " Vercelline said. "He turned ghost white. He
just couldn't believe it."
Ayuluk was charged with selling alcohol without a license, a felony.
The last stop of the night was Yukon-Kuskokwim Correctional Center, where Ayuluk was lodged.
Bethel Police Chief Howard Morris said he was tickled to hear about his quick-thinking officer.
"I've been in law enforcement for 27 years and this is probably only the second time I've ever heard of it happening," he said.