Pubdate: Fri, 30 Aug 2002 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2002 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Frank Main Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) DID DRUG THEFT MAKE COP RICH? An exhaustive investigation launched after 20 kilograms of cocaine were stolen from a Chicago police warehouse has led to a retired officer who bought a luxury car, gambled in Las Vegas and moved to Country Club Hills after he left the force in 1999, a source said Thursday. "We have him spending all kinds of money he should not have had," the source said. "He was trying to cover up, but did not do a good enough job." The man, who is expected to be indicted soon on federal charges, joined the department in May 1976. He worked in the Evidence and Recovered Property Section, which first inventoried the cocaine in 1997 after it was seized in a drug bust. The cocaine, valued at $400,000, was discovered missing in March 2001. The man is suspected of stealing the cocaine sometime between 1997 and 1999. The police, FBI and Internal Revenue Service have conducted a joint investigation, speaking to hundreds of people. Investigators have interviewed the man, and he knows he is the target of their probe. Other employees in the property room also were questioned, but were eliminated as suspects because they did not seem to have unusual spending habits. Investigators have reviewed the man's tax returns. They think he was trying to disguise his drug profits by reporting the money on tax returns as gambling winnings, the source said. He visited riverboat casinos in the Chicago area and tried his luck in Las Vegas. Investigators have obtained records that document his gambling. More than 100 people worked for the unit at the time the drugs were stolen, officials said. About a month after the cocaine was found missing in March 2001, police Supt. Terry Hillard replaced the head of the Evidence and Recovered Property Section, naming Toby Burton to a newly created commander's position. The department has moved its evidence from the Criminal Courts Building at 26th and California, where the 20 kilograms of cocaine were stored. Evidence is now secured in a state-of-the-art facility at Homan Square on the West Side and tracked with bar codes. Hillard ordered a top-to-bottom audit of the department's evidence. The audit is still under way, a police spokesman said Thursday. A 1996 audit found serious problems with the way property was being stored by the department. At one point, $7 million in narcotics evidence was missing, the audit said. Since that audit, there have been other cases of missing property that gave the department a black eye. In February 2001, about $16,000 in jewelry turned up missing when a woman went to claim her stolen rings, tennis bracelets and necklace. And the year before, evidence in the trial of a man accused in the beating of Girl X was mistakenly destroyed. The suspect, Patrick Sykes, was convicted earlier this year. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh