Pubdate: Sat, 26 Feb 2011 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2011 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Justin Berton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) DRUG COP ALLEGEDLY FILMED COUNTING CASH FROM SALE CONCORD -- A state drug agent was caught on video counting money and laughing after he sold a pound of methamphetamine he had allegedly stolen from a law enforcement evidence locker, according to court documents filed by state investigators. Norman Wielsch, 49, who led a multiagency anti-narcotics team in Contra Costa County, was recorded on a video device worn by a confidential informant who acted as the middle man between Wielsch and a phony drug buyer, investigators said in an affidavit they filed to obtain a search warrant. Wielsch and co-defendant Christopher Butler, 49, were each charged this week with 28 felony counts connected to the alleged sale and distribution of methamphetamine, marijuana, steroids and prescription pills. The two are scheduled to enter pleas Wednesday. The court documents outline a four-month investigation by state Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement agents who watched and listened as Wielsch allegedly raided evidence lockers and passed the drugs on to Butler. Authorities say Butler found buyers through his private investigations firm, Butler and Associates of Concord. In one instance, investigators said, Wielsch stole 12 pounds of marijuana after his team had made a 50-pound seizure on Jan. 27. To avoid drawing attention to the lightened evidence bag, Wielsch allegedly "fluffed" it up, investigators said. Butler told the confidential informant that Wielsch was trying to make extra money before he retired, according to the affidavit. In one wiretapped phone conversation between the two defendants, according to the documents, Wielsch jokingly complained that a marijuana purchaser had paid with too many small bills. "The guy is not going to use fives and tens for the next purchase, is he?" Wielsch allegedly asked. On Feb. 15, investigators said, Wielsch visited Butler's office to collect his share of the profit from a sale of a pound of methamphetamine. Video allegedly shows Wielsch and Butler weighing the drugs before handing them to the undercover informant. Wielsch thanked the informant for paying ahead of time, saying it eased his fears he was selling to an undercover police officer. "Cops would never give up the money first," Wielsch allegedly said. Investigators said Wielsch and Butler had conspired to steal 3 pounds of methamphetamine from a Contra Costa sheriff's building in Concord. Wielsch forged a "destruction order" to remove the drugs, investigators said. As a supervisor, Wielsch was authorized to destroy illicit drugs at a Martinez landfill. Investigators watched as the two men drove in Butler's Hummer to the landfill. According to the documents, Wielsch and Butler allegedly kept the 3 pounds of methamphetamine and dropped 3 pounds of flour on the ground. When they searched Butler's office, agents seized dozens of bottles of steroids and 4,000 Xanax anti-anxiety pills, the court documents say. Agents believe the drugs came from seizures made by Wielsch's anti-narcotics team. The team has been suspended until an audit is conducted. Wielsch's attorney, Michael Cardoza, said his client had become mired in debt and was helping authorities with their investigation. "We're not done vetting the accuracy of all the evidence," Cardoza said Friday. "But the tape is the tape. The crime is the crime. ... We're going to continue to cooperate and sit down with the district attorney's office and see if this case can be resolved." Butler's attorney, William Gagen, did not respond to phone messages. Wielsch is free on bail. Butler is still being held in lieu of $900,000 bail. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom