Pubdate: Sun, 19 Jan 2003 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2003 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Todd Lighty Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) FORMER COP CROSSED LINE, DESTROYED IT He vacationed with drug dealers, sold them arms, talked too much The beginning of the end for Chicago cop Joseph Miedzianowski came Dec. 9, 1998, when an operator with AT&T security left a puzzling message at his office in the Gang Crimes Unit. The telephone company wanted to talk about a wiretap on a suspect's phone. "Now this was a request by me?" he said when he returned the call, knowing he hadn't ordered a wiretap. "Well, not necessarily ... it has your name on the order," the operator said. The operator told him the tap had been placed on the cellphone of Joseph "Pote" DeLeon--a high-ranking member of the Imperial Gangsters street gang, and a key member of a drug ring Miedzianowski had been running for years. Miedzianowski hustled the call to a conclusion, telling the operator: "Everything's cool." But it wasn't. The inexperienced operator had misread the paperwork and inadvertently alerted Miedzianowski that he was the target of an investigation. The FBI had Miedzianowski's phone tapped and agents were listening when the AT&T operator blew the cover on its three-month investigation. They were still listening when Miedzianowski picked up the phone and urgently summoned DeLeon to a meeting, where he told the gang member to get rid of any drugs and the .40-caliber handgun the cop had given him as a Christmas present. Before the day was out, the FBI scrambled to roll up the network of Miedzianowski's drug conspirators. Within a week, Miedzianowski was arrested. Even fellow officers who were suspicious of the fast-talking cop once known as "Hammerin Joe" by the street gangs around Humboldt Park were stunned by the case the federal government put together. Prosecutors had another name for the former altar boy, high school wrestler, and college fraternity brother from Evanston: the most corrupt cop in the history of Chicago. In April 2001 a jury found that for more than a decade he had led a dual life as a police officer and drug dealer, operating a Miami-to-Chicago drug ring with leaders of the Imperial Gangsters, the Spanish Cobras, the Maniac Latin Disciples and the Latin Lovers. On Friday, a federal judge could sentence Miedzianowski, 49, to prison for life. Miedzianowski was the broad shouldered, storied street cop with a knack for getting guns off the street, cultivating informants, and working cases long after other cops called it a day. He was a charmer, the office prankster. He also carried a 9-foot bullwhip in his car to break up rowdy crowds. And when a suspect needed "tuning up," he was the muscle. He could be abrasive and egotistical, inventing a past built on a patchwork of lies: that he attended Northwestern University, earned a wrestling scholarship, graduated from college, was fluent in several languages, and that he served in Vietnam. Even his fellow gang members marveled at his gradual transformation from crooked cop to drug dealer. He vacationed with dealers, attended their baby showers, sold them hand grenades, robbed rivals, and fell so in love with a drug courier that his gang believed he had gone over the edge. "He lost sight of what was going on," said Nelson Padilla, the imprisoned leader of the Latin Lovers. Daniel Sampila, a former lieutenant in the Gang Crimes Unit, said he was at a loss to explain why Miedzianowski became so corrupt. "He's some kind of weird, sinister person. I can't figure it out. Giving gangbangers guns. Giving up covert vehicles. Identifying undercover officers. Hiding and protecting murderers. Going on fishing trips with gangbangers. There's something flawed in his brain, his personality," Sampila said. "I cringe when I hear the name Joe Miedzianowski. ... He had a lot of people fooled." I Was Framed Joe Miedzianowski (pronounced mehd-zuh-NOW-ski) was a police officer for 22 years. Even a partial list of corruption--as told by federal prosecutors, documents, interviews and witnesses at his trial--reads like a movie script: He planted drugs and guns on suspects, tortured them with a hot coat hanger; beat them with lead-knuckled gloves and stole their drugs, cash and jewelry. He fixed the criminal cases against his gang members, signed them out of jail for sexual trysts with girlfriends; helped a wanted killer flee the state; and supplied guns, including a submachine gun, and bags of ammunition to gang members. And he betrayed fellow officers by undermining investigations of gang members close to him, and instructing one to burglarize cops' homes and steal their guns. In a series of jailhouse interviews, Miedzianowski angrily denied doing anything wrong. Overzealous prosecutors and FBI agents framed him, he said, eager to notch their belts with the badge of a Chicago cop. "The Chicago Fire? Mrs. O'Leary's cow didn't do it, I did. Am I behind anthrax? The Twin Tower attacks? What the hell didn't I do? This is ridiculous," he said. Even after he was convicted, Miedzianowski threatened to kill the lead prosecutor, Brian Netols, and plotted to obtain AK-47 assault rifles and missile launchers for associates to help him escape from the federal courthouse during a hearing, according to Justice Department and Chicago police documents. Miedzianowski denied plotting to hire someone to kill Netols, whispering, "I'd rather do it myself, with my bare hands." As recently as last month, Miedzianowski was accused of providing an imprisoned gang member with personal information about a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agent the gang member reportedly wanted killed, sources said. Miedzianowski, who once worked with the ATF agent, has been placed in segregation at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, an area inmates call "The Hole." If he was a drug dealer, he asked in an interview, where are the financial trappings of that lifestyle? "There's no money here. Do I go on trips? Do I live extravagantly? There ain't no boat. There's nothing. ... If I was the dope dealer they said I was, I wouldn't be living in that little three-bedroom house. And I wouldn't be driving a 1988 Ford Bronco. What proof do they have? No guns, no money, no assets." But even John Galligan, Miedzianowski's longtime partner, has cooperated with the federal government since the trial, providing prosecutors with additional evidence of Miedzianowski's corruption. Galligan had pleaded guilty to fabricating a search warrant Miedzianowski used as a pretext to steal a kilogram of cocaine and then falsely testifying at a court hearing where the drug dealer claimed police stole her drugs. According to his statement to federal authorities, Galligan said he order for it to be done, it's going to be done," Miedzianowski said. "If somebody needs a tuneup ... there's certain things you've got to do to get the job done, and I do them... "We need some bad cops to keep the public in line. I'm not talking bad as in thieves. You need a couple guys that can do the job right. I do what I have to do to get the job done. I always have done it. My bosses know how I work." In 1984, Miedzianowski got in a jam that reached all the way to City Hall. He was accused of assaulting a Humboldt Park minister, Rev. Jorge Morales, who was a political ally of then Mayor Harold Washington. Miedzianowski said Morales was drinking from a bottle of wine outside his church and resisted arrest. Morales said Miedzianowski grabbed the wine from another man, broke it on the pavement and beat Morales when the minister asked him to clean up the broken glass. The department combined the Morales case with another brutality involving Miedzianowski and Galligan and suspended the two. But the Police Board dismissed the charges. Morales, now with the Illinois Conference of the United Church of Christ, said he regretted not filing a civil lawsuit against Miedzianowski. "It's sad that so many innocent people have been hurt by his wrongdoing," he said. Police commanders split up Miedzianowski and Galligan but they were reunited after Washington's death in November 1987. My Mentor Even fellow officers who did not particularly like Miedzianowski said he had a nose for recovering guns. "I profile people driving by. We stop the Mexican with the cowboy hat. Always stop them. Always stop the girl, a cute girl, in a nice car in a [bad] neighborhood," Miedzianowski said. "She's a courier. "Stop the guy with a baby seat in the car. I always come up with a gun. The guy with the baby seat ... they think it lends some credibility toward them. Gives them a little shield like they're a family man. He's got a pistol." He also excelled at recruiting informants. "There's no way to get directly inside the gang," Miedzianowski said. "I never used ... wiretaps. I don't use tails. I use my informants. My informants do all my work for me. They get me into every house, into every gang leader." He seemed to have sources in every gang selling cocaine and marijuana in and around Humboldt Park. There was Little Omar, Pote, Biggie, Mo and Casper. Nelson "Baby Face" Padilla was 16, a peewee in the Latin Lover street gang when he said he met Miedzianowski in the early 1980s. "He was one of those cops that would come through the neighborhood and intimidate everybody," recalled Padilla, now 38. "He was big and muscular and he never gave up on a foot chase. He was definitely not a Dunkin' Donut cop like the rest of them fat asses." Miedzianowski asked Padilla and his fellow gang members if they were behaving and inquired about school. Slowly, Miedzianowski gained Padilla's trust and loyalty. When Padilla was arrested with a handgun, he said Miedzianowski intervened and he was let go on the condition he'd bring in another gun. Their relationship grew as Padilla rose to become prince, or leader, of the Latin Lovers. Padilla said he provided information to Miedzianowski and Galligan about where rival gang members kept drugs and guns, eliminating the competition in the neighborhood along Fullerton Avenue, between Western and California. On several occasions, Padilla visited Miedzianowski at his Far Northwest Side home, where he was once photographed with his arm around Miedzianowski's son, who was then 10. As a gang crimes specialist, Miedzianowski held the rank equivalent to that of a detective. Increasingly, gang members were no longer informants and the enemy but his friends. "Joe became my mentor," Padilla said in a recent interview from federal prison in Florida. "I loved Joe." Gangs became a way of life for Miedzianowski and a way to make money. Padilla said he assisted Miedzianowski and other rogue cops in stealing from drug dealers. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Padilla said he and Miedzianowski participated in 15 robberies--or "geezos"--their slang word for holdups. The first geezo was arranged around 1989 by an old friend of Padilla's, Mohammed Omar, who was a member of the Spanish Cobras and already an operative for Miedzianowski. Padilla said he and Omar teamed up with Miedzianowski to rob drug dealers at the former Diamond Touch carwash near Grand Avenue and Central Park Boulevard. The scheme was to sell 10 kilograms of cocaine to two drug dealers, but nine of the kilos would be fakes. Miedzianowski inspected the fake dope and concluded it looked real enough and gave his go-ahead. The kilogram of cocaine was cut open and the buyers nodded their approval. Because they had done business with Omar in the past, they trusted him and didn't inspect the rest of the shipment before handing over a duffel bag with at least $150,000. Padilla said Miedzianowski and Galligan had parked nearby at a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. The officers pulled over the buyers' car and seized the kilos before the buyers discovered they had bought fake drugs. According to Omar's statement to the FBI, Miedzianowski used the cash to remodel his home and told him: "Keep them coming." During the summer of 1990, Omar said Miedzianowski gave him a handgun and an official Chicago Police Department jacket so he could pretend he was a cop. Omar assisted Miedzianowski in stopping two drug dealers transporting three-kilograms of cocaine. Miedzianowski released the dealers but he and Omar kept their drugs Other times, Padilla said Miedzianowski and Galligan staged his arrest in front of drug dealers after Padilla bought cocaine on credit. Miedzianowski provided Padilla with bogus bond slips he could show the dealers that his drugs had been seized by police. Teflon Cop Miedzianowski's suspicious activity did not go unnoticed. In the early 1990s, Miedzianowski and Galligan were assigned to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to work on an investigation of the Latin Kings. ATF supervisory agent Diane Klipfel accused Miedzianowski of stealing money and jewelry during a drug bust. Klipfel's charge set off a flurry of other accusations. Miedzianowski accused Klipfel of stealing, and Klipfel charged that Miedzianowski threatened to kill her and her children. The ATF and Chicago police investigated Klipfel's accusations but her charges were not sustained. Both agencies accused the other of not cooperating. In January 1993, a directive from ATF headquarters in Washington ordered Miedzianowski and Galligan sent back to the Police Department. While assigned to ATF, Miedzianowski met another drug dealing informant, Juan "Casper" Martir, at the time second-in-command of the Imperial Gangsters. Preferred Treatment As he had done for Padilla, Miedzianowski arranged for Martir to have sexual trysts with a woman while he was in federal custody. When Martir was released from prison at the end of 1993, he sought out Omar and the two began dealing drugs. They occasionally paid Miedzianowski a few thousand dollars so he would protect their operations from legitimate law enforcement officers, according to government documents. That protection included helping Padilla elude homicide detectives looking to question him. When a rival from the Maniac Latin Disciples was gunned down in January 1995, witnesses implicated Padilla. Miedzianowski obtained a copy of the investigative file and showed Padilla the witnesses' statements. Padilla hid in Martir's drug stash houses for a month then fled the state, using the name of a Chicago police detective as an alias. "I always maintained my communications with Joe," Padilla said. "He was my guardian angel." Meanwhile, Martir had failed to share his drug profits with his gang and decided for his own safety to move his drug operation to Miami in 1996. Before he left, Martir arranged a meeting with Miedzianowski at the old police station on Maxwell Street and introduced him to a high-level figure in the Imperial Gangsters, Joseph "Pote" DeLeon. Miedzianowski and DeLeon hit it off. DeLeon told FBI agents Miedzianowski gave him crack cocaine to sell, and bags of ammunition and 12 guns as gifts. DeLeon sold the guns and ammo to fellow gang members who were fighting rivals. He told the FBI that Miedzianowski tipped him off about planned police drug sweeps through his drug corners, provided him names of gang members who were police snitches, and identified undercover police vehicles such as a Geo Tracker and a Ford Thunderbird with tinted windows. Once, Miedzianowski brought DeLeon into an area of the police station off-limits to informants and suspects. Sgt. Ed Stack said he later realized Miedzianowski had conducted a "reverse lineup"--allowing DeLeon to see the faces of undercover police officers who buy drugs on the street. Miedzianowski would page cohorts when undercover officers were working in their turf, telling them that "Fig and the boys are buying dope." "Fig" is Officer George Figueroa, an expert on the Imperial Gangsters. He said undercover officers were able to purchase from all the street corners controlled by the gang but one: the area around St. Louis Avenue and Lyndale Street controlled by DeLeon. "It never even dawned on us that someone on our side was betraying us," Figueroa said. New Attraction By the spring of 1997, his gang friends said Miedzianowski was falling deeper and deeper into the life of a drug dealer. He dated the former girlfriend of an Imperial Gangster. And then he met Alina Lis, a blue-eyed blonde who was the godmother of one of Martir's children. Lis would eventually earn the title "frequent flyer" for the amount of cocaine she transported aboard airplanes. Lis was then 33--11 years younger than Miedzianowski. "She is a very attractive girl," Miedzianowski said. "She's got a heart. Just like my wife, she's got a heart. My wife is unbelievable. That's the honest to God truth. My wife is beautiful on the inside as she is on the out, just like Lis. She exudes love, just like my old lady, I swear." Lis said Miedzianowski falsely told her he and his wife had separated, and that he was taking care of his son and daughter. She was impressed with how polite he was, always opening doors for her. "We spent a lot of time together for me to believe that there was no wife living at home," said Lis, who was convicted of drug charges. "Another thing that made me fall in love with him was he was a wonderful father." Miedzianowski said he kept his 18-month affair from his wife, even though Lis said Miedzianowski often spent the night with her. Lis, who denies dealing drugs, said she and Miedzianowski had made plans to marry and have children. Miedzianowski set Lis up in an apartment in the 8500 block of West Bryn Mawr Avenue, buying furniture and signing the lease with an alias, Joe Lis. The three-story tan and brown brick building is six blocks from Miedzianowski's home. Associates said he was paying Lis' bills and had become "greedy," demanding that Omar and Martir pay him $15,000 a month in protection money. Omar said he refused to pay and tried to distance himself from Miedzianowski. Padilla also saw changes as Miedzianowski spent more time with Lis, whom fellow gang members called Ala. "He lost sight of what was going on. He's a cop," Padilla said. "Before he was dealing with Ala, yeah, we used to kick it with him but he wouldn't be in the house while we were cooking cocaine, he wouldn't be in the house when a shipment came in. He wasn't going to the airport picking people up. But Ala was doing all that. When Joe got involved with her, then, things changed." Miedzianowski's sergeant also noticed that he was missing a lot of time at work for unexplained reasons. That year, he helped capture a fugitive killer from Connecticut featured on the television show "America's Most Wanted." But he also was delivering kilos of crack cocaine to DeLeon, who had become the drug ring's biggest customer and had risen within the Imperial Gangsters to become a board member overseeing the gang. Miedzianowski hung out in bars with gang members and he attended showers for their babies, buying them gifts. Miedzianowski and his family in spring 1998 vacationed in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, with a drug dealer, who arranged a fishing excursion for Miedzianowski and his son, and videotaped the trip. Listening In The balancing act fell apart when Martir was arrested on drug charges in Florida in February 1998. An informant tipped authorities Martir had been regularly calling Miedzianowski from prison, calls that are automatically recorded. In cryptic conversations, Miedzianowski told Martir he would put in a good word with prosecutors if he kept his mouth shut about the Chicago drug operation. He also promised to collect drug debts to pay for Martir's lawyers. Armed with the Florida calls, prosecutors in September obtained a court order in Chicago to begin secretly listening to and tracing phone calls of Miedzianowski's and others in the conspiracy. Tape recordings played at trial caught coarse, freewheeling conversations between Miedzianowski and members of his drug conspiracy. In one conversation, Miedzianowski reminded a gang member that he wanted loyalty and threatened to harm those who dare cross him. "I would not only [expletive] them, I would [expletive] their brothers, their sisters, their aunts, their uncles," he said. "If they had a parakeet, I'd [expletive] the parakeet." On Dec. 16, 1998, FBI agents arrested Miedzianowski when he showed up for work. Miedzianowski's commander summoned him into his office, where agents were waiting. "You are under arrest. Please don't touch your gun," one of them told him. Even before his trial, the Chicago Police Department disbanded the Gang Crimes Unit and instituted tighter controls over homicide files, information Miedzianowski had provided to gang members and their lawyers. Of the 22 suspects eventually arrested with Miedzianowski, 18 pleaded guilty and received shorter prison sentences for cooperating with the government. Four others went to trial with Miedzianowski and were convicted. At trial, prosecutors played more than 250 secretly tape-recorded conversations between Miedzianowski and gang members. In the end, Miedzianowski's gift of gab did him in. "The only thing that [ticks] me off about him is that he ... talked on the phone the way he did," Padilla said. "I still can't fathom what he was thinking." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex