Pubdate: Thu, 25 Apr 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) DRUG DEALER TESTIFIES SHAW SOLD HIM BADGE Dolton Mayor William Shaw angrily denied a drug dealer's federal court testimony Wednesday that he bought a village marshal's badge from the mayor for more than $30,000. "He is out of his mind," Shaw said from Springfield, where he is serving his dual role as a state senator. "That is totally untrue." The dealer, Arthur Veal, is a prosecution witness against Chicago police Sgt. William Patterson and officer Daryl L. Smith in their trial on charges of conspiring to possess cocaine. Under questioning by Patterson's attorney Phillip Turner in an attempt to undercut Veal's credibility, Veal testified he bought a marshal's badge from Shaw for $30,000 to $40,000. He said he later flashed the badge to U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents when he was stopped at a Texas airport in June 2000. Agents discovered he was carrying about $5,750, records show. When the DEA agents called the Dolton Police Department about the badge, they were told he worked for the village, Turner said. The agents seized the money but let Veal go, he said. Veal, owner of a Dolton trucking company, was arrested in November 2000 and pleaded guilty to smuggling 88 pounds of cocaine in two trips that year. He was sentenced last month to 10 years in prison. Veal also testified he obtained Cook County sheriff's badges through the office of an unidentified 3rd Ward alderman of Chicago. He said he sold the badges for more than $1,000 each. He did not say when he allegedly bought the Dolton badge or the sheriff's badges. But he indicated the sheriff's badges were obtained during the administration of Sheriff Richard Elrod, who was voted out of office in 1986. Shaw said Veal was one of about 20 people in Dolton selected as village marshals, who could be called to service in emergencies. The marshals were given badges but have never been called to duty since the position was created in 1997, Shaw said. "He was a legitimate trucker, as far as I knew," Shaw said. Shaw said he did not know if the police conducted a criminal background check for the marshals. Veal was a convicted felon. Veal said he returned the badge to the police department in December 2000. He was called to a meeting with police officials who said they heard he was involved in conduct unbecoming a police officer and they asked him to give the badge back, he testified. Earlier Wednesday, federal prosecutors played secretly recorded tapes of conversations between Veal and Patterson. They contend the tapes show the men plotting to steal $20,000 in cash and five bricks of cocaine the FBI planted in a South Side apartment. On a Jan. 19, 2001, tape, Veal tells Patterson, "The dope and the money gonna be in the same place." Patterson responds, "OK." In one videotaped meeting in Veal's office, Patterson's 6-year-old daughter sits on Patterson's lap while the men discuss business. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel