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"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

‘Sick’ Newark officer was really partying at FOP lodge


A Newark police officer has been suspended without pay for 18 work days for calling in sick and then improperly opening the local Fraternal Order of Police lodge for drinks with friends after legal serving hours.
The punishment was issued to Officer Adam Pfannenschmidt on Oct. 3. He will be eligible to return to his $52,617-a-year job on Nov. 2, Newark Police Chief Steven Sarver said yesterday.
“It’s not the kind of conduct we want from our officers,” Sarver said. “It makes us look bad."
Pfannenschmidt, 39, has been a patrol officer since December 2007. He is a good officer who behaved badly and deserved punishment, Sarver said.
Sarver gave this account:
Pfannenschmidt called in sick on July 20 last year for his 5 p.m.-to-3 a.m. shift. Policy requires sick employees to stay at home. Instead, Pfannenschmidt went to the FOP lodge about 3 a.m. on July 21 with another man and two topless dancers, one of whom is his girlfriend. The group drank 12 beers without paying.
A sergeant driving by about 5 a.m. noticed the lodge was occupied when it should not have been and found the officer and his friends.
The lodge is licensed to serve liquor but not after hours, Sarver said. Pfannenschmidt is a lodge trustee and used his key to enter. He told internal investigators that he had done so about 10 times.

Pfannenschmidt was suspended for four work days without pay last year after he lied about an injury he suffered in a bar fight that resulted in extended sick time. The punishment for the more-recent misconduct, which Pfannenschmidt did not contest, was thus more severe, Sarver said