Your average cop is a weasel and here's why

Ex-cop at Grand Blanc security firm gets probation for using fake FBI credentials to get hotel discounts
By Gary Ridley

FLINT, MI -- A former Pontiac police officer who operates a Grand Blanc-based security firm was sentenced to probation for using fake Federal Bureau of Investigation credentials to secure discounted government rates at hotels.
Flint U.S. District Magistrate Judge Michael J. Hluchaniuk sentenced John Hamilton Wood IV in a Monday, May 5, judgment to one year probation after he pleaded guilty to possession of imitation federal identification following an investigation by the FBI.
He was also ordered to perform 120 hours of community service and pay a $2,500 fine.
The federal government offers an $83 lodging per diem for employees that is honored by many hotels. The per diem rate is used by government travelers to obtain hotel rooms at a standard discount, according to the American Hotel and Lodging Association. The discounted rate allows federal employees to save upward of $50 per night at some Flint-area hotels.
FBI officials say they began the investigation after they received complaints about Wood. Wood is not associated in any way with the FBI, according to court records.
Court records show that Wood turned over the fraudulent identification to federal agents in April 2013 at a security company on South Saginaw Road in Grand Blanc. 


police officer charged with stealing from relative
PORTLAND, Maine — A retired Portland police patrol sergeant is facing felony theft charges accusing him of taking $158,000 from a family member.
The county prosecutor's office said Friday that 62-year-old Bruce Chase of Naples was indicted by a Cumberland County grand jury.
The Portland Press Herald reports (http://bit.ly/QsfmfJ ) that police say he's accused of taking $158,000 from a family member between 2009 and this year while he had the power of attorney to manage her money.
Chase could not be reached for comment. There was no phone listing in his name.
The city of Portland said he retired in good standing as a sergeant in 2000, after becoming a public safety officer with the department from 1980-1982 and a police officer in 1982.
He is scheduled to appear in court in June.

 Head of agency that investigates police misconduct himself under scrutiny
The head of the Oregon State Police Office of Professional standards has been placed on administrative leave as the Linn County District Attorney’s Office is reviewing a criminal investigation against him.
Capt. Jeff Lanz, 39, was placed on paid leave April 29, when the investigation started.
The matters under investigation occurred in Linn County, said Lt. Gregg Hastings, an OSP spokesman.
Hastings and Deputy District Attorney George Eder, who is mulling the matter for possible criminal charges, declined to discuss the nature of the investigation.
Lanz, 39, is the former station commander at Oregon State University and a graduate of Lebanon High School.
He joined the state police in 1999, and most recently was assigned to the agency headquarters in Salem.
The Office of Professional Standards in in charge of internal investigations for the law enforcement agency. It also oversees risk management, human resources and training for OSP.
An OSP major from outside the Salem area was assigned to conduct the investigation.


Former Amity cop convicted of shoplifting
By Carl Hessler Jr., The Mercury
Posted: 05/05/14, 11:29 AM EDT | Updated: 5 days ago
1 Comment
NORRISTOWN — A former Berks County police officer finds himself on the other side of the law now that he is a convicted shoplifter.
Former Amity Township Police Officer Glenn James Oesterling, 36, has been sentenced in Montgomery County Court to two years’ probation after he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of retail theft in connection with a June 2013 incident that occurred at the Upland Square Giant store in West Pottsgrove. Judge William R. Carpenter, who accepted a plea agreement in the case, also ordered Oesterling to complete 36 hours of community service.
Specifically, Oesterling admitted that he stole items valued at $296.35 from the store on June 18. Authorities said Oesterling passed the store checkout area without paying for merchandise he placed into blue, reusable shopping bags in the shopping cart he was pushing.
Oesterling did not offer an explanation for his conduct.
“There was no reason, no explanation offered for what he did so I still don’t know why he did what he did,” said Assistant District Attorney Heather Hines. “It’s unfortunate when anybody commits a crime like this but it’s especially unfortunate when someone is in law enforcement. Now that he has been found to be dishonest, that’s probably the worst thing that you can have being a police officer. It’s just an unfortunate situation.”
The conviction likely will prevent Oesterling from ever holding a job as a police officer.
“Any police department is going to do a background check so I would think a conviction of any sort, most especially of a crime of deceit, would probably preclude him from having a police job anywhere else,” Hines said.
Oesterling, a 12-year veteran corporal of the police force who was fired by Amity Township supervisors last year, pleaded guilty to the most serious charge lodged against him by West Pottsgrove police.
A separate summary charge of retail theft, stemming from a theft of merchandise valued at $38.04 from the same store on June 12, was dismissed against Oesterling as part of the plea agreement. A summary charge is similar to a traffic citation. Another lesser charge of receiving stolen property also was dismissed against Oesterling as part of the plea agreement.
Oesterling had been scheduled to stand trial on the charges on Monday.
“Mr. Oesterling is deeply remorseful as well as troubled by the result of this case,” said defense lawyer Adam Sager. “Throughout this proceeding he was willing to acknowledge his potential bad judgment. My client will now prepare for a life outside the department as a result of the poor judgment he used in the one incident in Montgomery County.”
However, Sager said Oesterling “is troubled” that prosecutors turned down two separate requests for acceptance to the Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition program, even though the charges involved non-violent allegations and even though others, including an elected official accused of false swearing under oath, have been admitted to the ARD program in the past.
The ARD program is reserved for first-time, non-violent offenders and allows offenders to clear their records after successfully completing a period of probation.
According to a criminal complaint, a loss prevention officer with Giant observed a man leave the store on June 12 without paying for six items worth $38.04 in reusable bags.
The loss prevention officer used store surveillance footage to confirm what the items were and that the man bypassed all points of sale, according to the criminal complaint. 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, according to court papers.
Following that alleged incident, the loss prevention officer printed photos of the man and “placed them in the office for review by other loss prevention officers,” according to the criminal complaint filed by West Pottsgrove Police Officer Joseph Ray Buchert.
Almost a week later, on June 18, another loss prevention officer observed a man, matching the description of the person captured in 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, according to court papers.
The loss prevention officer followed the man, later identified as Oesterling, around the store as he 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.
Oesterling was charged by West Pottsgrove police in July and initially was suspended from the Amity police force without pay. However, late last year, the township supervisors unanimously voted to fire Oesterling.
Follow Carl Hessler Jr. on Twitter @MontcoCourtNews
The following is an earlier version of this story.
NORRISTOWN — A former Berks County police officer finds himself on the other side of the law now that he is a convicted shoplifter.
Former Amity Township Police Officer Glenn James Oesterling, 36, has been sentenced in Montgomery County Court to two years’ probation after he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of retail theft in connection with a June 2013 incident that occurred at the Upland Square Giant store in West Pottsgrove. Judge William R. Carpenter, who accepted a plea agreement in the case, also ordered Oesterling to complete 36 hours of community service.
Specifically, Oesterling admitted that he stole items valued at $296.35 from the store on June 18. Oesterling, a 12-year veteran corporal of the police force who was fired by Amity Township supervisors last year, pleaded guilty to the most serious charge lodged against him by West Pottsgrove police.
A separate summary charge of retail theft, stemming from a theft of merchandise valued at $38.04 from the same store on June 12, was dismissed against Oesterling as part of the plea agreement. A summary charge is similar to a traffic citation. Another lesser charge of receiving stolen property also was dismissed against Oesterling as part of the plea agreement.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Heather Hines.
Oesterling, who was represented by defense lawyer Adam Sager, had been scheduled to stand trial on the charges on Monday.

Check back here for more details on this developing story.