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Georgia fired a state trooper for his conduct. Now he leads Seward County’s Homeland Security task force.

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Georgia fired a state trooper for his conduct. Now he leads Seward County’s Homeland Security task force.

SEWARD, Neb. (Flatwater Free Press) – The Seward County Homeland Security task force, sometimes using the controversial practice of civil asset forfeiture, seized $11.8 million from Interstate 80 drivers through civil and criminal forfeiture in its first 32 months.

The Seward-based head of that law enforcement task force trains and supervises officers – despite being barred from becoming a Nebraska police officer himself.

Blake Swicord was fired as a state trooper in Georgia after selling guns to a pardoned felon and allegedly sending sexually explicit texts and photos from his police-issued phone. He claims he was wrongfully terminated. Swicord then was arrested on suspicion of battery following an alleged domestic violence incident with his then-girlfriend.

The Nebraska agency in charge of law enforcement training has twice denied Swicord admission, saying he didn’t meet the good character requirement. That agency said Swicord failed to disclose his arrest or his firing while applying to become a certified police officer in Nebraska, as first reported by the Lincoln Journal Star. On Friday, the Nebraska Supreme Court dismissed his latest appeal.

Homeland Security officials told the Flatwater Free Press this week that they had no knowledge of Swicord’s previous dismissal or arrest when he was first placed into a Homeland Security role in 2019. They said they were never notified by the Seward County officials who hired him, but rather learned of Swicord’s troubles in April 2021, when an assistant U.S. attorney told the agency that the Nebraska Supreme Court had denied Swicord’s first appeal in his quest for police certification.

Swicord will remain in his job as task force coordinator as he continues his legal battle, Seward County Sheriff Mike Vance told a reporter during the Seward County Board meeting Tuesday morning.

Vance has previously said he would have to let Swicord go if he can’t become a Nebraska police officer. Vance and dozens of Swicord’s colleagues have praised the 27-year police veteran for his leadership, interdiction skills and professionalism.

Sheriff Mike Vance(Flatwater Free Press)

“Since his employment with my agency, Mr. Swicord has shown nothing but the upmost integrity and professionalism,” Vance wrote supporting Swicord in 2019. “After conducting this extensive background check I feel very sure that Mr. Swicord is a man of integrity and very honest at all times.”

The Police Standards Advisory Council – the board that oversees law enforcement certification in Nebraska – has acknowledged Swicord’s qualifications. It has also ruled twice that he can’t go through training to become a Nebraska police officer.

“When the petitioner came to Nebraska looking for a fresh start, he failed to demonstrate the necessary good character qualities demanded of any Nebraska officer,” the council wrote in its 2019 decision. “His actions in the application process demonstrate to this body that the petitioner cannot be considered to be a person who can be characterized as being truthful, honest or trustworthy.”

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In January 2020, Vance stood before the Seward County Board with a request: Create a temporary six-month position for the county’s drug interdiction task force.

Drug interdiction is big business in Seward County. Homeland Security has given multiple awards to the Seward task force for being the best in the country.

Seward County has accounted for a third of all civil asset forfeiture cases in state court in the past decade in Nebraska, an FFP analysis found. Civil asset forfeiture allows law enforcement to seize money without convicting or even charging drivers of a crime.

In five years, Seward County law enforcement have hauled in $7.5 million through civil and criminal forfeitures.

The job Vance wanted to create would be open to civilians. It would require qualifications like 10 years of law enforcement experience and 100 hours of interdiction training. And it would replace the captain’s position Swicord had just vacated.

Vance hired Swicord in 2019 as captain of the interdiction task force. Swicord had spent years perfecting and teaching the art of spotting crime on the country’s interstates. He and Vance met through Desert Snow, an interdiction training company owned by fellow Seward deputy David Frye.

But Swicord was forced to resign that captain’s position in early 2020 after he was unable to become a certified police officer.

Days later, county board members approved the new, temporary position. Then Vance hired a familiar person for the new role: Blake Swicord.

Six months later, Vance went before the board once more – this time, requesting to make the temporary position permanent.

Darrell Zabrocki – at the time a candidate for the county board – questioned the move at that meeting, the Journal Star reported.

Zabrocki, a former Sarpy County sheriff’s deputy, said the civilian position was “nothing more” than a way to circumvent the normal hiring process. He raised concerns about civil and criminal liabilities if Swicord led the task force as a civilian. The job is typically held by a certified law enforcement officer.

“The current police climate in the country requires law enforcement to do it better, do it cleaner, and to follow statute and policy at a level greater than ever before,” Zabrocki said then.

But the county board voted unanimously to approve the position.

Zabrocki, who was eventually elected to the board, declined to comment for this story.

Swicord’s road to Seward

A timeline tracing the career of Blake Swicord

1996 – Blake Swicord becomes a certified law enforcement officer in Georgia and starts working at the Baldwin County Sheriff’s Office.

2001 – Swicord becomes a Georgia State Patrol trooper.

2005 – Swicord meets David Frye, a Seward County deputy, through a federal drug interdiction training program.

February 2017 – FBI raids two Georgia businesses. During the raid, they discover two firearms. The owner, a convicted felon who eventually had his firearm rights restored, says they were purchased from his friend, Swicord.

March 2017 – Georgia State Patrol launches an internal affairs investigation, placing Swicord on paid leave.

December 2017 – Georgia State Patrol terminates Swicord for “misconduct, insubordination and conduct reflecting discredit on the department.”

January 2019 – Mike Vance starts his term as Seward County sheriff. Swicord is hired as captain of the county’s Homeland Security interdiction task force.

March 2019 – Swicord applies to reciprocity training to become a certified law enforcement officer in Nebraska.

May 2019 – Brenda Urbanek, then-director of the Nebraska Law Enforcement Training Center, denies Swicord’s application to reciprocity training.

September 2019 – Swicord applies to basic training.

December 2019 – Urbanek denies Swicord’s application to basic training.

Jan. 2, 2020 – Unable to become certified in Nebraska within a year of his hiring, Swicord resigns from the Seward County Sheriff’s Office.

Jan. 8, 2020 – Seward County Board approves a six-month task force coordinator job, able to be held by a civilian. Swicord is hired for the role.

June 2020 – Seward County Board votes to make Swicord’s six-month coordinator position permanent.

April 2021 – Nebraska Supreme Court upholds Swicord’s denial from reciprocity training.

July 2023 – Nebraska Supreme Court dismisses Swicord’s appeal for admission into basic training. He remains unable to become a certified law enforcement officer in Nebraska.

Other area politicians also declined to comment.

John Culver, board chair, declined an interview, but said in an email that he trusts Vance’s decision to keep Swicord on the job. Raegan Hain, another board member, didn’t respond to a voicemail.

Misty Ahmic, who wasn’t a board member when the job was created, said the board is only responsible for approving job descriptions, not hiring and firing.

“We don’t have the power,” Ahmic said. “That would be on the sheriff’s side to oversee. The board is not responsible for that. It doesn’t fall on me to make that decision. And so I don’t think that my opinion is relevant.”

When asked for comment, County Attorney Wendy Elston wrote in an email that the sheriff has broad authority “to oversee his department’s personnel matters.”

Swicord didn’t respond to emails seeking comment. Both Seward’s past and current state senators declined to comment.

“I have heard about this issue and on the peripheral am aware of what is going on. It would be inappropriate for me to speculate on matters in which I have no direct involvement or oversight,” Sen. Jana Hughes said in an email.

Kenneth Schmieding, a board member who voted on Swicord’s job description, said in a phone call that at the time he knew “there was controversy” but that they “left it to the sheriff’s discretion.”

The controversy started with a 2017 FBI raid on two restaurants in Milledgeville, Georgia, according to Georgia law enforcement records.

During the raid, investigators found firearms. The owner – convicted of a felony in 1999 – said the guns were purchased from his friend, Swicord.

The man was pardoned and had his firearm rights reinstated in 2011. But the raid launched an internal affairs investigation into Swicord, placing him on paid leave for nine months.

The investigation’s findings: Swicord associated with a person with a criminal background, breaking department policy; used his state-issued phone to send sexually explicit photos and texts; violated policy by working security for a concert after his request was denied; and used his position to get a police officer to erase a traffic citation issued to his girlfriend.

In December 2017, Swicord was fired for “misconduct, conduct reflecting discredit on the department, or insubordination,” according to Georgia State Patrol records.

Swicord filed a claim of wrongful termination. He said he was never paid to work concert security. He said he had only asked the police officer to move a court date for his then-girlfriend. He has acknowledged the inappropriate texts but said the inappropriate photo was an image sent by his then-wife, sharing how a medical procedure was healing. The investigation was politically motivated, he said, after he’d been outspoken about overtime pay and other department issues.

“I am convinced the agency used this situation as an opportunity to dig and seek out anything that could be used against me and my employment,” he wrote when asking the then-director of the Nebraska Law Enforcement Training Center to reconsider her denial.

A month after his firing, Swicord was arrested in a domestic violence incident where he backhanded a woman in the face, according to a police incident report. Prosecutors then dropped the charge.

Swicord arrived in Seward County a year later.

In 2019, Vance told the Journal Star he was aware of Swicord’s past termination and arrest. After looking into it, he decided to continue with the hire.

“I just decided a man with this kind of experience that dedicated his life to law enforcement … I just figured because he hadn’t done anything wrong, he deserved a chance,” Vance told the Journal Star.

A Homeland Security Investigations official said screening of local task force members is the responsibility of the local agency.

“HSI Omaha was not given any other official notifications concerning derogatory employment issues or litigation concerning Blake Swicord’s employment with Seward County,” the official said in a statement.

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Swicord first applied for reciprocity certification – an accelerated training program for law enforcement officers already certified in another state.

His application was denied because of how he answered two questions:

“Have you ever, either as an adult or juvenile, been cited, arrested, charged or convicted for a violation of any law?”

Swicord answered no.

He first claimed he misunderstood the question. He later said he answered “no” under the advice of his attorney.

“My stance was that I should never have been arrested in the first place,” Swicord said in a hearing before the Police Standards Advisory Council. “So why should that be detrimental to me?”

The second question read: “Have you ever had a professional license that you hold be under investigation?”

Swicord answered no.

He told the council that he misunderstood the question, and never considered his law enforcement certification to be a professional license. Instead, he said he thought the question was describing a driver’s license, or medical license.

The Police Standards Advisory Council was unmoved.

“As a well-educated individual, and an experienced law enforcement officer … this ‘misunderstanding’ doesn’t seem credible to this body,” the council wrote in its decision. “His deliberate omissions, falsifications and misrepresentations are certainly grounds for denial in this case.”

Swicord appealed to the Nebraska Supreme Court. It upheld the decision to bar him from accelerated training.

He also applied for 16-week basic training, this time checking “yes” on the two questions that had previously landed him in hot water.

That application was also denied.

Thirty-one of Swicord’s law enforcement colleagues vouched for his character and leadership during his appeal. The council still upheld its decision.

“The petitioner puts forward the notion that by simply checking the correct boxes on his Personal Character Affidavit for Basic Certification, his previous misdeeds should be forgiven,” the council wrote. “The petitioner has sought to minimize his actions.”

Swicord once again appealed. The Nebraska Supreme Court decided Friday to dismiss the case. Swicord plans to continue litigation, Vance said this week.

In 2020, Georgia officials recommended revoking Swicord’s law enforcement certification. The appeals process is still pending. A revoked Georgia license would keep him from becoming a Nebraska police officer.

If Swicord does become certified in Nebraska, his history would follow him to the witness stand, law experts said.

If a prosecutor is going to put an officer on the stand who has a history of lying, they’re required to turn that over to the defense.

The Seward County attorney was already notifying defense lawyers of Swicord’s background when he was able to patrol, said Nicole Tegtmeier, the county’s former public defender.

That would make it harder for prosecutors to reach convictions in cases where Swicord is a key witness, said Bennett Gershman, a professor at Pace University Law School.

Gershman didn’t see a problem with Swicord training other officers in a civilian role. But in matters where honesty, professionalism and credibility are being examined, “he’s going to get hurt,” Gershman said.

“He’s damaged goods in terms of those kinds of situations.”

The Seacrest Greater Nebraska reporter covers issues across the state of Nebraska. It is named in honor of philanthropist Rhonda Seacrest and her late husband James, who proudly led several Nebraska newspapers through Western Publishing for 40 years.