Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jul 2002 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2002 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Maro Robbins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) SENTENCES OF 3-PLUS YEARS, PROBATION GIVEN IN COP STING Although Alfred Valdes was among the youngest of 10 law officers arrested last year in a FBI sting targeting police corruption, the baby-faced patrolman proved himself the least naive. When first approached by an undercover agent posing as a drug smuggler, the 28-year-old demanded the purported trafficker remove his shirt to prove that he wasn't a law officer wearing a recording device. No wire lurked under the shirt, so Valdes heard the agent out. But when it came time to seal the deal " to ride shotgun over a cocaine shipment " Valdes never showed. "He thought something seemed screwy," said his defense attorney, Raymond Fuchs. This gut hunch helped Valdes, now nearly 30, walk out of San Antonio's federal court today with a sentence of three years probation " the lightest punishment so far in the city's largest police corruption case. By contrast, his former colleague Pete Saenz was sentenced today to three years and six months in prison " still a relatively lenient penalty in a case that already has put one officer behind bars for 15 years. Saenz admitted conspiring with six other patrolmen and a civilian to guard carloads of what they believed was cocaine but in fact contained crushed plasterboard prepared by federal agents. Twice, the 33-year-old escorted shipments weighing a total of 150 kilograms and collected altogether $5,000 for his betrayal of the badge. For Valdes, intuition came too late to keep him completely out of trouble. By the time he balked, he already had tapped into law-enforcement databases and sold the information for $700, believing the traffickers would use the criminal-history data to screen their clients. Valdes pleaded guilty to one count of unauthorized use of the computer, a charge with a maximum penalty of six months in prison. At Fuchs' request, U.S. District Judge Edward C. Prado lowered the sentence to probation without objection from prosecutors. Saenz faced up to roughly 11 years in prison. But prosecutors recommended he receive a five-year sentence, rewarding him in part for agreeing to testify against his fellow officers. His lawyer, Chris Gober, argued for still less time, emphasizing that Saenz had no prior criminal history and that his case hardly deserved to be sentenced like a typical drug deal. In court, Saenz addressed Prado in a heartfelt speech full of remorse. "What I would like you to understand, your honor, is I am miserable and cannot forgive myself that I was not stronger," Saenz said. Outside the courthouse, he seemed equally unforgiving of the agents who baited him and his badge-wearing buddies. "The FBI, they're out to get anybody," he said. "They don't care who " good guys, bad guys." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake