An Oklahoma sheriff faces allegations that he let his son deal meth from his police car, that he rounded up women for strip teases—and that he covered up a missing-persons case.
Molly Miller was only 17 when she vanished in a high-speed police chase down a rural Oklahoma road. She was riding in a car driven by a local meth-head, James Conn Nipp, and he gunned it at 120 mph to leave cops in the dust.
Nipp was allegedly the last person to see Miller alive that summer night in 2013. Her family never heard from her again. And they say the sheriff of Love County, where Miller went missing, never fully investigated the girl’s disappearance—perhaps because he is Nipp’s own cousin.
But Miller’s family may be one step closer to justice. This month, a grand jury filed charges to remove the Love County lawman from office, as the FBI investigates allegations that he assisted his 38-year-old son’s meth dealing.
[excerpted]http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/07/25/meth-strippers-a-missing-teen-fbi-investigates-oklahoma-sheriff.html