Pubdate: Wed, 31 May 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: John Silvester JAIL FOR CORRUPT POLICEMAN For eight years, Victoria Police drug squad detective Lachlan McCulloch was isolated and condemned as obsessive by many colleagues for his fight against corruption in the squad. Yesterday he was vindicated when a one-time mate, former detective Kevin Hicks, and a long-term enemy, career criminal Peter Pilarinos, were sentenced to lengthy jail terms. And this time McCulloch was not alone. A month ago he received a phone call from his former boss, Detective Chief Inspector John McKoy, who declared: "I would be proud to walk into court with you." As he sat in the Supreme Court public gallery, McCulloch felt no sense of triumph - just a wave of relief that his long battle to expose police corruption was finally over. Many times some colleagues has branded him as obsessed over his fight to discover who had "sold out" his investigations into Pilarinos. Often McCulloch wondered who he could trust. In November last year he resigned from the force. But sitting in the Supreme Court yesterday, McCulloch drew comfort from the men around him. He was flanked by drug squad detectives, including McKoy. He also knew he now had the support of the vast majority of police in Victoria. As the drug squad chief and his whistle blower sat in the gallery, the corrupt detective and his partner sat in the dock below-neither acknowledging the presence of the other. Hicks, a former senior detective, and Pilarinos were the core of a corrupt group responsible for stealing drugs from a police storage depot in Attwood. Hicks was in charge of all drugs seized by the drug squad and accepted bribes to let Pilarinos steal them back. They may have got away with it too, if it hadn't been for Lachlan McCulloch, who as a young detective in the drug squad in 1992 realised his investigations into Pilarinos were being sold out from within. He started a campaign to find out who was the rat in the drug squad ranks and was to spend five years gathering evidence against Hicks and Pilarinos before they were charged by Ethical Standards Department investigators in 1997. McCulloch was vilified by some police who refused to believe that the popular Hicks was crooked. They blamed the young detective for the arrest and believed the case against their friend was flawed. It was described as a "souffle" - solid on the outside and hot air in the middle. Then Hicks pleaded guilty. Yes, he had sold out police operations and yes, he had helped Pilarinos sell drugs. Now Hicks sat in the dock, wearing his grey court suit, steel rimmed spectacles, and his Blundstone boots. He had been led to believe that he was likely to get four years jail for his crimes. His lawyers had argued for a four-year non-parole period during an earlier plea hearing and prosecutor Bill Morgan-Payler, QC, said "We do not view the defence submission as inappropriate." Justice George Hampel is not considered the toughest sentencer in the Supreme Court. Some police complain he can be too compassionate and lenient for their tastes. But Justice Hampel is his own man and if the defence and prosecution thought they had a deal they forgot that the judge calls the shots. Hicks was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years, with a non-parole period of five. As Hicks heard the sentence details and realised he was getting more jail time than he expected he let out a little sigh and blinked slowly. He looked a little like his old nick-name - "Koala Bear". Pilarinos came next. In a blue blazer and open-necked shirt he heard Justice Hampel say that claims the defendant was an important witness in continuing police corruption matters had been "overstated". Justice Hampel said the person who offered the bribe and the one who accepted could be seen to be equally culpable. He sentenced Pilarinos to eight-and-a-half years with a minimum of six. As the two men were led out of court, Pilarinos' youngest son ran to embrace him. The young man's grief turned quickly to anger as he swore at a court guard and punched the door on his way out. Outside the court McCulloch walked down the stairs. The son turned his anger on the whistleblower. "You are nothing but a f---- dog. I hope you rot in hell." McCulloch did not respond. Mrs Valerie Pilarinos, recently released from jail after a completing a sentence for perjury, was also less than complimentary, angrily referring to McCulloch as "Australia's Serpico" and wishing him an unpleasant after-life. McKoy and others from the drug squad were close by. Later, investigators from the Ethical Standards Department, who had built the case that exposed the corruption, took McCulloch for a coffee away from the biting cold and the bitter Pilarinos family. But in direct contrast, many of the police who had loudly supported Hicks after he was charged with corruption were not in court to hear the final sentence. Outside court, McCulloch acknowledged the role of his former boss at the drug squad. "It has been a difficult time for me and I appreciate the support I have had from Mr McKoy, other members of the drug squad and the Ethical Standards Department. Mr McKoy always encouraged me to investigate the corruption," he said. The message was clear for McCulloch. After fighting corruption for eight years and sacrificing his career of 16, the battle had been worthwhile. He was not alone after all. Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Neil Comrie said the events leading to yesterday's sentencing of Hicks and Pilarinos sent "a clear message that the force can police itself and weed out unprofessional and unethical officers". Mr Comrie added: "The force will do everything possible to ensure any corrupt officers are removed from the ranks of the Victoria Police. The public would expect nothing less." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson