ST. LOUIS 鈥 The first couple days of the new city sheriff鈥檚 tenure have started on a rocky note. He鈥檚 blaming his predecessor.
Sheriff Alfred Montgomery says former sheriff Vernon Betts and his staff took files and cabinets, furniture, keys, books and other vital information on their way out the door earlier this week, capping off what Montgomery called a non-existent transition that has left his staff scrambling to catch up.
He spent his first days in office figuring out operations, payroll and asking for entry codes and files, he said.
鈥淲e鈥檙e spending our entire day figuring out what鈥檚 missing and how we can move forward,鈥 he said in an interview.

蜜芽传媒 Sheriff Alfred Montgomery speaks with reporters on his first day of work on Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025.
Meanwhile, the former sheriff, Betts, said he was lounging in an easy chair at home, watching TV, enjoying his first few days of retirement. He said he hadn鈥檛 taken anything from the office except personal belongings. All of the files were left behind, he said.
People are also reading…
鈥淲hat files would I take and what would I do with them?鈥 he said. 鈥淚t don鈥檛 make sense.鈥
Montgomery, a former deputy, was sworn into office Wednesday after defeating Betts in a Democratic primary. He takes over an office in charge of transporting prisoners between jail and court, providing courthouse security and serving legal papers, including eviction notices and protection orders.
Betts and Montgomery fought a sometimes bitter campaign with both accusing each other of being unprofessional. Montgomery, after announcing a run for sheriff in 2019, accused Betts of squandering taxpayer money and running a shoddy operation. Betts called Montgomery a 鈥渓ying sack,鈥 and accused him of being unqualified.
The acrimony continued even after Betts conceded defeat.
Montgomery accused Betts in news stories of blocking his efforts to transition into office before his official swearing-in. He said Betts wouldn鈥檛 talk to him or teach him about office operations. Betts said there was no need for a transition at all.

蜜芽传媒 Sheriff Vernon Betts listens during a sentencing hearing for Thomas Kinworthy, who was sentenced to life in prison without parole for shooting and killing 蜜芽传媒 police officer Tamarris Bohannon, in 蜜芽传媒 circuit court in June, 2024.
On Tuesday, Montgomery filed for a restraining order to force Betts to leave the downtown courthouses, stop destroying property and 鈥渋mmediately relinquish鈥 the sheriff鈥檚 office.
An employee said in a sworn affidavit that one of Betts鈥 employees took filing cabinets from the office last month and loaded them into an SUV. Another said they saw Betts walking out of the building with a box under his arm. Still another said he was berated by Betts when he tried to pick up a uniform.
Judge Paula Bryant on Tuesday ordered the sheriff鈥檚 office locked pending Montgomery鈥檚 swearing-in on Wednesday, and set a hearing for Thursday on the accusations.
Montgomery said he arrived on his first day, on Wednesday, to find only a stack of legal papers in the office. He said there was furniture missing. He didn鈥檛 have the codes to enter some rooms.
He and his staff started taking an inventory. He also spent time getting ready for an inaugural ball he hosted at Union Station later that evening.
The party was thrown as a gift to his campaign, Montgomery said. It was, he said, a sign of the positive morale he was building in the office.
Montgomery has overhauled the department鈥檚 top brass, promoting roughly a half-dozen people from within the department to those positions and bringing others in from the outside. He previously delivered notices to Betts鈥 commanders that they鈥檇 be out of a job when he was sworn in.
The department also has about 30 deputy applications pending 鈥 some of which are from people who left for other police departments or previously retired, Montgomery said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a different administration,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 believe in working together as a team. We want to bring our morale up.鈥
On Thursday, Montgomery鈥檚 lawyers appeared in court on their request to force Betts to turn over anything he took from the office.
Betts鈥 lawyer, Elkin Kistner, said his client would cooperate as soon as he got a list of the missing items. He also noted that Montgomery鈥檚 lawyers hadn鈥檛 filed an actual petition, so the suit should be dismissed.
Blake Lawrence, the chief lawyer for Montgomery鈥檚 office, agreed to dismiss the case. He said they were still creating a list of items and would re-file the lawsuit if the former sheriff didn鈥檛 cooperate.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to give them a certain time frame,鈥 Montgomery said. 鈥淚f they do not deliver, we will file again 鈥 something different 鈥 and hold them accountable for their actions. No one is above the law.鈥
Betts said he didn鈥檛 have anything to give them.
鈥淚鈥檓 just trying to ease on down the road,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 72 years old. I don鈥檛 want to work as hard as I鈥檝e worked these last eight years.鈥