| VOLUME 64/ NUMBER 1 8 -r*v. ■ VI SOUTHPORT, N.C.50 CENTS |. 28, 1994 JBob Boyd, a Long Beach newcomer, is the newest member of council — Page 2 We’ve blow the whistle on our county editor, who looks really sharp in stripes — IB The South Brunswick girls host an 8-team tournament starting this afternoon -- 9B Racial iivjustice charge meets sheriff at door Black group protest surprise to workers By Terry Pope County Editor Sixteen days into his new administration, Brunswick County sheriff Ronald Hewett is sitting at his desk shaking his head in disbelief. A committee of black residents has accused him of racial injustice when it comes to hiring and firing officers. The black men had approached Hewett after his December 5 swearing-in with their concerns, but this time the gloves were off. They opened the debate in the local media, and in the process caught the young sheriff off guard. "1 feel," said Hewett, "that it is certainly not fair to judge my administration in 15 days while citing statis tics, which are in themselves false, for the past two years." The Concerned Citizens for Equal Justice (CCEJ) is represented by the Rev. Sam Flowers; Willie Fullwood, a Brunswick Community College trustee; former school board member Thurman Gause; Democratic party ex ecutive Bemest Hewett and Dr. George Saunders of Calabash. CCEJ formed, the group says, because of "persistent rumors" that Hewett’s goals now include "the removal of all Afro-Americans in the department within six months." Rumors were further fueled by the demotion and transfer "to a position much less visible to the public of the highest ranking Afro-American in the department (Capt. John Marlow) and apparent clustering of Afro American deputies in the much less desirable jailer positions preparatory to forcing retirement and/or resig 4flSn8