Pubdate: Fri, 24 Jan 2003 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2003 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Steve Warmbir, Federal Courts Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) NOTORIOUSLY CROOKED COP SENTENCED TODAY Listen to Joseph Miedzianowski, the man called Chicago's most crooked cop, and you hear a terrifying talent for talking. It's a talent that helped him nab criminals, seduce informants and perpetuate his own tough-guy legend. It's a talent that also helped turn his informants into partners in crime and inspire equal parts fear and loyalty among his cronies in the cocaine ring he ran. And in the end, it's a talent that trapped him, as federal prosecutors wiretapped his phones to record his secret life as a drug dealer and as a close friend to gang-bangers. Today, in federal court, Miedzianowski, 49, will learn whether he gets life behind bars, or could possibly get out an 80-year-old man if he receives the lower sentence requested by his defense attorneys. Miedzianowski, as solid as a gravel truck with a voice to match, has long insisted on his innocence and in prison has talked about killing the federal prosecutor most responsible for putting him behind bars, Brian Netols. Miedzianowski also has allegedly plotted to have associates get guns and missile launchers in an attempt to spring him during a court hearing, sources said. He was convicted in April 2001 along with a cast of gang-bangers, drug dealers and his mistress for running a Chicago-to-Miami drug ring. Prosecutors have said in court that the world of Joseph Miedzianowski was upside down, where cops were thieves, where bad guys got police help to beat criminal charges. And it was a world underscored by brutality. In one conversation with a gang member, Miedzianowski says: "Because I tell you, if somebody f---- me over, I would not only f--- them, I would f--- their brothers, their sisters, their aunts, their uncles. . . . If they had a parakeet, I'd f--- the parakeet." In his upside down world, Miedzianowski arrested punks to get guns off the streets, but then secretly put weapons in the hands of his gang- banger buddies. And what are guns without bullets? Taxpayer-paid ammunition was stolen from the Cook County Sheriff with the help of a Miedzianowski friend and passed on to gang-bangers, prosecutors argue. Miedzianowski had three words for his friend when the time was ripe to swipe ammo. "Steal, steal, steal," Miedzianowski said. His criminal life infected families, including his own, which has supported him throughout the case. Miedzianowski had his photograph taken with a drug dealer's child. And Miedzianowski had his own son photographed with a gang member. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake