Pubdate: Fri,  9 Aug 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, San Antonio Express-News
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States)

DRUG COP HANDED 11 YEARS

A former police sergeant who put himself and other officers up for hire by 
drug smugglers and became a central target in the FBI's hunt for crooked 
cops was sentenced Thursday to more than 11 years in prison.

Standing in federal court, Conrad Fragozo Jr. offered no explanation for 
how he came to play a leading role in a case that last year bruised the San 
Antonio Police Department even as it crowned a long corruption search by 
local FBI agents.

Instead, the 37-year-old apologized to the residents of San Antonio for 
betraying the trust given him during his 15 years as a San Antonio police 
officer.

"For 14 years I was a good officer," he said. "And only in the last year, I 
failed a test I shouldn't have failed."

In court, the humbled father of three stood in stark contrast to the patrol 
supervisor depicted in FBI investigative reports as a man with a mercenary 
streak — ready to betray even private employers who paid him to guard their 
businesses.

The reports, obtained by the San Antonio Express-News, sketch the slow 
courtship between the officer and the undercover agent who posed as a 
free-spending drug trafficker named "Ricardo."

Opened in 1997, the FBI investigation ended with 10 law-enforcement 
officers and two civilians indicted in March 2001.

Fragozo served as a catalyst in the largest case, a cocaine-trafficking 
conspiracy involving a half-dozen patrol officers as well as Fragozo's uncle.

Fragozo played the dual roles of principal leader and patsy as he 
unknowingly ushered his friends, one of whom helped recruit still more 
patrol officers, into the sting operation. Mostly, the officers escorted 
cars they were told contained shipments of cocaine.

The FBI reports suggest Fragozo came to the agency's attention in fall 1999 
when he approached a longtime friend, a woman who secretly worked as a paid 
informant — earning $95,945 from the bureau over nine years, according to 
Fragozo's attorney John Convery.

In September of that year, Fragozo told her he needed money and that he 
wanted to steal profits from drug dealers, the informant told agents.

A month later, the informant introduced Fragozo to "Ricardo" at a strip 
club. Afterward, the sergeant asked his friend if "Ricardo" was a drug 
dealer. She said yes.

"To which Fragozo replied, 'Make sure and thank him for the lap dance that 
he bought me,'" the report states.

By February, Fragozo had earned $3,300 protecting his first cocaine sale, 
an event staged by agents using bricks of flour and drywall. Eventually, he 
would receive more than $30,000 — the most among the indicted officers.

At Thursday's sentencing, as throughout the case, Fragozo's defense lawyer 
described the FBI investigation as an unfair trap.

"Without the undercover agent, Conrad Fragozo may not have ever strayed 
from an otherwise law-abiding life," Convery told U.S. District Judge 
Edward C. Prado.

The FBI reports state that, after his first assignment, Fragozo told an 
undercover agent who was posing as one of Ricardo's cronies that he worked 
security at a bank. He said he could get the key to the automatic teller 
machine.

That summer, Fragozo told "Ricardo" about his work with a narcotics task 
force. He talked about a task-force informant and offered tips on how to 
hide narcotic odors from drug-sniffing dogs. He also described a small, 
relatively unguarded airport.

Any such swagger vanished in March 2001, when FBI agents arrested Fragozo 
and the others. The sergeant confessed immediately and dismissed his talk 
about robbing bank machines as simply an effort to impress "Ricardo."
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