Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jan, 2000 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2000 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Ted Gregory Tribune Staff Writer BENSENVILLE SUSPENDS ACCUSED SERGEANT The Bensenville Board of Fire and Police Commissioners decided Thursday night to suspend without pay a police sergeant who is accused of stealing $6,000 during drug and gambling arrests, concealing drug trafficking at a bar owned by his family and evading taxes. Village administrators, armed with allegations from an internal investigation of the Police Department, want to fire Sgt. Joseph DeAnda, 48. The first step is the suspension without pay. The board set Feb. 24 as the date to begin hearings on firing DeAnda. Theodore Poulos, a former assistant U.S. attorney now in private practice, has led a probe of the beleaguered department since February 1998, shortly after federal agents raided Club Latino, a Bensenville bar owned by DeAnda's father. Agents confiscated cocaine and marijuana and arrested four people. Poulos is alleging in formal complaints to the Police Commission that DeAnda knew of drug trafficking at Club Latino and concealed it while completing the bar's liquor license application in 1995 through 1998. The special investigator also contends that DeAnda, a 16-year veteran of the department, stole money seized in arrests in 1992, 1994 and 1995, then tried to replace the cash shortly after Poulos began his investigation. The allegations against DeAnda include a claim that he failed to report on his tax returns $10,010 he earned from an unlicensed and unregistered security firm that he and several other officers ran from the department from 1985 to 1998. DeAnda's attorney, Richard Reimer, a former Bensenville police officer, contends that the move to fire DeAnda is Village President John Geils' effort to exert undue control over the department. Reimer also alleges that Poulos is ignoring corruption elsewhere in the department in a purge of officers deemed undesirable by village administrators. The board's hearing comes amid a turbulent 24 months for law enforcement in the community. The Club Latino raid prompted police administrators to re-assign DeAnda, who had been chief of detectives, and hire Poulos to undertake the investigation. Within a few days of the raid, Police Chief Walter Hitchuk resigned, citing his wife's health. Poulos later raised allegations that Hitchuk was aware of drug dealing at the club and shielded it. Hitchuk has been unavailable for comment. The investigation also yielded allegations that Bensenville Police Officer William Wassman destroyed cocaine before a case was concluded and falsely stated in at least 20 cases that other officers had witnessed him destroying illegal narcotics. Wassman was indicted in February on charges of obstruction of justice and official misconduct and resigned in September. A criminal case is pending in DuPage County Circuit Court. The same month Wassman resigned, Patrol Officer Susan Hawkins filed a sexual discrimination lawsuit against the village, alleging that four men were promoted to sergeant over her--even though two of them were rated lower than she on the eligibility list. Also in September, acting Police Chief Carl Dobbs resigned, a month early, reportedly over the handling of Hawkins' efforts to achieve a sergeant's post. Hawkins settled her lawsuit Sept. 29, after the village agreed to promote her instead of Officer Peter Spizzirri, who had been slated to become sergeant. The three members of the Fire and Police Commission then resigned in protest. In November Spizzirri filed a federal lawsuit claiming the promotion agreement violates the law. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck