Former Lancaster County detective charged with homicide has many local ties


By BRETT HAMBRIGHT

It was a case of a local cop becoming the criminal.
Eighteen years ago, Jack O. Edmundson Jr. — now charged with homicide in western Pennsylvania — raided the Willow Street property of a suspected marijuana grower.
Edmundson and other detectives found what they were looking for — numerous marijuana plants and drug-packaging paraphernalia.
Edmundson, while later perusing the suspected dealer's assets, made another find — 200 platinum coins in a safe deposit box.
He took 20 of them for himself, according to police reports.
An East Hempfield Township coin dealer later told police he bought 10 of the coins for $3,670.
Edmundson, booted off the force, eventually was sentenced to 1 to 2 years in Lancaster County Prison for theft. He served 10 months and four days, prison officials said Friday.
Lancaster city Mayor Rick Gray, a former defense attorney who represented the Willow Street marijuana grower, said Edmundson had a reputation even before the charges against him became public.
"He wasn't held in high esteem," Gray said Friday morning. "Most police officers tell you something and you can take it to the bank. Edmundson's reputation was that he was otherwise. He dealt with things the way he felt he had to."
Now, more than 12 years after being paroled, Edmundson, 43, is facing a murder charge in western Pennsylvania. Indiana County investigators allege Edmundson shot and killed 62-year-old Frank Petro on Tuesday inside Petro's sportsman's store.
Investigators said the killing might have been part of an extortion plot. Edmundson is accused of extorting more than $130,000 from the victim while posing as an undercover police officer, according to the Associated Press.
Alan Goldberg, a county defense attorney who also represented the Willow Street grower, couldn't recollect Friday all the specifics about that case.
But he remembered Edmundson's reputation.
"When he was with the Lancaster County Drug Task Force, his veracity always seemed to be in question," Goldberg said. "He was very proactive. Most on the defense bar always questioned his reports."
After being released from Lancaster County Prison on Sept. 24, 2001, Edmundson left the area. He was recently living in Saltsburg, a Pittsburgh-area town with a population of 873.
Prior to becoming a Lancaster County Drug Task Force detective, he worked part-time as a Quarryville police officer, according to newspaper records.
Quarryville police Chief Kenneth Work, who joined that force in 2001, said Friday he never heard mention of Edmundson's name prior to this week.
Gray, former president of the Lancaster Bar Association, said the name was known among defense lawyers.
"Police officers certainly develop reputations as being straight-ahead people and factual," Gray said. "He wasn't highly respected by the defense bar.
"Police officers are human beings. ... it's rare when they go this far astray."
Lancaster County President Judge Joseph Madenspacher was district attorney here when Edmundson joined the Drug Task Force in the mid-1990's.
"He was fairly young," Madenspacher said Friday. "In retrospect, it might have been a mistake."
Initially, Edmundson's boss heard no complaints.
"My recollection is he was fine. I didn't hear anything," Madenspacher said.
Madenspacher, however, placed Edmundson on administrative leave "when we had good evidence this (coin theft) occurred."
Edmundson didn't follow the order.
"He broke administrative leave by going out on a raid," Madenspacher said. "I remember I told the head of the Task Force, 'I want his resignation on my desk tomorrow morning.' "
"I found out after the fact that other (defendants) were complaining to their lawyers about him stealing stuff," Madenspacher said.
One of those allegations — that Edmundson had stolen valuable phone cards during a 1995 arrest in Paradise — went to court.

Edmundson was sentenced jointly for both thefts, according to court records.