Pubdate: Wed, 07 Feb 2001 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2001 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Feedback: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/letters/letted/ Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Todd Lighty EX-COP A DRUG DEALER, JURY TOLD Defense Counters - He Lived His Job In Anti-Gang Unit A federal prosecutor told a jury Tuesday that former Chicago policeman Joseph Miedzianowski was "nothing but a drug dealer" and promised to guide jurors into a world in which the ex-cop's close friends were gang members with names like the Ghost and Baby Face Nelson. Assistant U.S. Atty. Brian Netols laid a broad framework in which he said the government's evidence would prove that Miedzianowski used his police powers to protect his drug ring, not just from rival drug dealers, but also from legitimate law enforcement. "You are about to enter the world of Joseph Miedzianowski, where everything is upside down, where right is wrong and wrong is right and police protect the bad guys," Netols told the jurors, But one of Miedzianowski's lawyers, Randy Rueckert, told the panel that Miedzianowski's world was nothing like that. "Let's talk about Joe's world," Rueckert said. "Joe is married with two children. He was a Chicago police officer for 22 years. . . . Joe was a cop 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year." Rueckert said Miedzianowski was so good at his job that he developed an enviable array of gang informants whom others in the Chicago Police Department relied upon to help solve gang-related crimes. Now, Rueckert said, some of those same informants, finding themselves in trouble with the law, have agreed to testify against Miedzianowski in exchange for lighter prison sentences. "They are all drug dealers. They are all gangsters," Rueckert said. "They all cut a deal." These clashing views will play out during the former gang crimes officer's trial, which could last two months, in U.S. District Judge Blanche Manning's courtroom. Miedzianowski, 47, faces charges that he hid a wanted killer from police, shook down drug dealers for cash and narcotics, provided warring gangs with semi-automatic handguns, misused confidential informants, fixed state drug cases, and may have placed undercover officers' lives in jeopardy by revealing their identities. In addition to Miedzianowski, four other alleged members of his Miami-to-Chicago drug conduit are on trial: Mohammed S. Omar Jr., 31; Omar Feliciano, 27; Lissett Rivera, 30; and Miedzianowski's former girlfriend, Alina Lis, 37. Lis' lawyer, Melvin Weisberg, told the jury that Lis was not a drug courier, as the government alleged, but became entangled in the case merely because of her love for Miedzianowski, whom she believed was separated from his wife and would marry her. "For Alina Lis, this was not about drugs and drug distribution, but a love story," Weisberg said. Other defense lawyers also attacked the government's potential witnesses and pointed out to jurors that they would not see physical evidence such as mounds of cash from drug deals or piles of cocaine because there was none. The government's two-year investigation also led to the arrests of 18 others, including Miedzianowski's police partner,John Galligan. Galligan is to be tried separately, but his name surfaced in court Tuesday when the government called its first witness, Juan Martir, a convicted drug dealer known on the streets as Casper the Ghost because of his large, round and balding head. Another witness prosecutors plan to call is convicted murderer Nelson Padilla, known as Baby Face Nelson. Martir testified that Miedzianowski and Galligan arranged for him to have sex in the federal building while he was a prisoner in 1991. At the time, Martir was an informant for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and Miedzianowski was temporarily assigned to the bureau along with other city cops. Martir testified that he was brought from the Metropolitan Correctional Center to the federal courthouse to be interviewed by Miedzianowski. He said Miedzianowski at one point asked whether he wanted a woman. Martir said yes, and Galligan later brought a woman to the courthouse, leaving Martir alone with her in a conference room, Martir testified. "Did you have sex?" Netols asked. "Yes," Martir replied. Martir also testified that Miedzianowski protected the drug ring, supplied him with a gun, assisted in ripping off drug dealers and brokered cocaine deals. Martir, who once was a high-ranking member in the Imperial Gangsters, is to return to the witness stand Wednesday. In his opening statement earlier Tuesday, Rueckert cautioned the jury about the "Juan Martir Show," saying Martir was a career criminal offender facing the prospect of life in prison and had decided to testify against Miedzianowski. "This isn't the first time Juan Martir was arrested in a major case and sought to get himself out of a jam by beefing on someone else," Rueckert suggested to the jury. But Netols said the evidence would show that Miedzianowski was an integral part of the drug ring, which in a three-year period spent $33,000 on airline tickets to smuggle drugs and money between Chicago and Miami. Netols said the government's evidence would include hundreds of hours of secretly recorded conversations. "The most important evidence you are going to hear are the actual statements of Joseph Miedzianowski," Netols said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens