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Courtesy of McKenzie Banner March 2007
By: Shannon McFarlin

Henry County Sells Helicopters

PARIS (March 22, 2007) Henry County is “out of the helicopter business” and the county’s drug control program is richer by $222,111.11 for it.

At a morning press conference at the Henry County Airport, Sheriff Monte Belew announced the sale of 1 ½ county-owned helicopters to Dakota Air Parts of Fargo, N.D., a sale which will enrich the county’s drug control efforts.

“This is the largest deposit ever in the Henry County Drug Control fund,” Belew said.

The county acquired the helicopters in 1996 during the administration of Sheriff Leon Williams. Two were purchased before the “magic date” of Oct. 1, 1996, which will enable the county “to do anything with them we want—we’re free to sell them or do anything with them,” Belew said. The other two were purchased after that date and therefore must be transferred to other agencies.

Henry County Sheriff Monte Belew announced the sale for $222,111.11 of the sheriff department's helicopters. The money was deposited into the Henry County Drug Fund account. Helping him make the announcement at the Henry County Airport are: left to right, Lance Thoreson of Dakota Air Parts of Fargo, N.D., which bought the copters, Damon Lowe of the sheriff department, Belew, and Patricia Byars, business director for the sheriff department.

Because of the expensive upkeep and liability insurance on the helicopters, Belew said, selling or transferring them will be better for the county. “None of these helicopters have been flown in 2-½ years,” Belew said.

Money from the sale of the copters “will be spent more effectively and efficiently for the citizens of Henry County” by being directed to drug control efforts, he said, than being used for helicopter upkeep.

Henry County “is completely out of the helicopter business,” Belew said, “but we won’t be without air support. The Tennessee Highway Patrol is at our beck and call if we need them for air support and that’s at no cost to the taxpayers. And we have two pilots on contract here at the airport if we need them.”

The remaining two copters—1971 and 1972 OH58s—will be transferred to another agency, Belew said. “Neither of those are eligible for sale, as I said,” he said.

Lance Thoreson, vice-president of sales for Dakota Air Parts, thanked Belew and the sheriff department “for opening the doors” for the sale. “We appreciate the way you worked with us on this.”

Dakota buys and sells military-type aviation parts, Thoreson said.

Director of CID Damon Lowe, headed up the process to sell the copters for the sheriff department, and said, “It was a long process; we just completed it last Friday and we started it in October of 2006.”

Belew complimented Lowe on his efforts. “It took a lot of hours, a lot of tedious paperwork, a lot of emails back and forth with the Department of Defense,” he said.

“The whole process was tedious,” Belew said, “but it was worth the $221,000.”