Amity fires police officer charged in shoplifting case


 AMITY — The police officer charged with shoplifting hundreds of dollars in groceries has been fired by the township.
Following a Local Agency Police Tenure Act Hearing on Sept. 10, the Amity Township Board of Supervisors voted unanimously on Sept. 18 to terminate Cpl. Glenn A. Oesterling, effective immediately.
Township Solicitor Brian F. Boland said Oesterling would be notified by certified mail.
Supervisor Richard L. Gokey was absent from the meeting.
Oesterling, a 12-year veteran of the police force, was charged in July for two incidents of retail theft and receiving stolen property. He was subsequently suspended without pay.
Boland said the found the evidence of the charges credible and convincing.
Oesterling, 35, reportedly walked out of the Upland Square Giant on both June 12 and June 18 without paying for the merchandise he allegedly put into blue reusable shopping bags in the shopping cart he was pushing.
According to a criminal complaint filed by West Pottsgrove Police, a loss prevention officer with the Giantobserved a man leave the store on June 12 without paying for six items worth $38.04 in the reusable bags.
The loss prevention officer used store surveillance footage to confirm what the items were and that the man “bypass(ed) all points of sale,” the complaint states.
In the footage, the suspect was observed pushing a shopping cart with a child’s car attachment on the front and three small children riding on the cart in different positions.
Following that incident, the loss prevention officer printed photos of the man and “placed them in the office for review by other loss prevention officers.”
Almost a week later, on June 18, another loss prevention officer observed a man matching the June 12 photos enter the store. The man was pushing a cart with the same three children in the same type of cart with blue reusable grocery bags.
The loss prevention officer followed the man, later identified as Cpl. Oesterling, around the store as he allegedly placed items into the reusable bags.
After moving toward the service desk, “the defendant then bypassed all points of sale and then exited the store,” the loss prevention officer told police.
The loss prevention officer stopped Oesterling in the store vestibule, where “the defendant then identified himself as a ‘cop,’” according to the complaint.

West Pottsgrove Police responded and the loss prevention officer alleged there were 53 store items totaling $296.35 in Oesterling’s possession.