Pubdate: Fri, 17 Mar 2000 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/index/ Author: Frank Main, staff reporter Bookmark: MAP's link to Illinois articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/il MORE OFFICERS FACE INDICTMENT IN PROBE Two Chicago police officers and a Cook County sheriff's correctional officer are expected to be indicted as early as next week in the widening federal probe of a drug ring allegedly run by a rogue cop. The correctional officer is a cousin of former Chicago police officer Joseph Miedzianowski, who is accused of masterminding a Miami-to-Chicago drug pipeline from 1988 through his arrest in December 1998. The correctional officer was stripped of his badge and gun on Thursday pending an investigation, said Bill Cunningham, spokesman for the sheriff's office. The officer, a firearms instructor, was transferred to a less sensitive assignment in a minimum security wing of Cook County Jail, Cunningham said. A drug courier cooperating with prosecutors said she sent cocaine to the correctional officer's home, federal court records show. He and two unidentified Chicago police officers are expected to be charged soon, a law enforcement source said Thursday. Nelson Padilla, 35, who pleaded guilty Tuesday in state court to the 1995 murder of Roberto Detres, on Thursday became the 11th defendant to cut a deal with prosecutors in the federal drug conspiracy case. "I robbed, extorted and sold drugs with Joseph Miedzianowski and others," Padilla told U.S. District Judge Blanche M. Manning. Prosecutors agreed to recommend a lighter sentence for Padilla in exchange for testimony against Miedzianowski and his two remaining co-defendants. Padilla said he teamed with Miedzianowski and others to rip off drug dealers, and was part of a major Miami-to-Chicago drug distribution network. Miedzianowski helped him evade police for Detres' murder, he claimed. In a conversation recorded by federal authorities, the corrections officer once suggested to Miedzianowski that they shake down more drug dealers, saying, "I think it's time to fly the Jolly Roger," referring to the skull-and-crossbones flag that pirates used, a prosecutor said. "You have a murderer and a congenital liar making allegations against a highly decorated police officer," Miedzianowski lawyer Ralph Meczyk responded. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea