A team of NYPD narcotics cops was under investigation after arresting four patrons of a Queens club for selling two bags of cocaine. A secret surveillance tape appeared to show that the cops never bought drugs from them.
Another Queens cop, Dennis Kim, and his partner were arrested for allegedly accepting cash and sexual favors in return for protecting a pimp�s brothel. An informant says that Kim and other 109th precinct cops planted drugs on suspects and stole cash during gambling raids. Kelly had praised Kim�s unit in 2004 for its arrest activity.
Sgt. Michael Arenella and Officer Jerry Bowen of the Brooklyn South narcotics unit were arrested for allegedly stealing cash and drugs from an undercover officer after they rewarded their informant with seized cash and drugs.
Two other Brooklyn South narcotics officers, Det. Sean Johnstone and Julio Alvarez, were charged with allegedly falsifying records after the disappearance of 11 bags of cocaine from a Coney Island dealer.
And don�t think that these corruption cases were confined to only the last year and a half.
Last year, over Kelly�s attempts to keep it secret, the Post published IAB�s 2006 corruption report. According to the Post, 114 cops were arrested for various acts of corruption.
These included:
- soliciting sex in exchange for overlooking crimes.
- stealing credit cards from the homes of the dead.
- hiring a hit man to commit a murder.
Also included:
- Arrests of officers rose 25 per cent from 91 to 144 over the previous year.
- The number of drug-using cops jumped 138 per cent, from 8 to 19.
- Fraud allegations involving insurance credit card and welfare swindles rose 85 per cent from 27 complaints to 50.
- The number of cops stripped of their guns and badges and placed on modified assignment jumped 55 per cent, from 137 to 212.
We look forward to the Post�s publication of IAB�s 2007 report. We can guarantee that Kelly won�t release it.
We conclude with the sentencing in the fall of 2006 of retired detective Thomas Rachko.
He received seven years in prison for stealing $800,000 from drug dealers while assigned to the Northern Manhattan Institute, a narcotics unit focusing on drug dealers in Harlem and Washington Heights.
Retired Lieutenant John McGuire, who had supervised Rachko and 40 other Upper Manhattan narcotics detectives, was sentenced to 14 months for stealing $110,000 in drug cash over three years.
Rachko�s partner, Det Julio Vasquez, was sentenced to six years for robbing drug dealers of $740,000 over a period of eight years. Six other current and former officers were implicated in the drug thefts.
Some of the crew had been captured on videotape three years earlier, stealing $169,000 from a drug-money courier. The videotape had not been made by the NYPD�s Internal Affairs Bureau but by a federal task force investigating unrelated money-laundering.
The feds watched as Rachko, who had retired the year before, and Vasquez � both wearing NYPD jackets � arrested the courier, whom the feds were tailing, and stole the $169,000 he was carrying.
The above all occurred in the 30th precinct territory. That�s the spot where 15 years before, a scandal known as the Dirty Thirty resulted in the convictions of three dozen officers on drug-related charges.
In New York City, police corruption scandals occur every 20 or so years. The seeds are being sown for another.