Manhunt Cancelled after Illinois Pig Proven to be a Liar

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http://news.nationalpost.com/news/p...d-his-mistress-to-get-better-payday-from-army

Police officer who killed himself allegedly arranged for his mistress to marry his son to steal from Army

FOX LAKE, Ill. — Before he killed himself and made it seem like he died in the line of duty to allegedly avoid an embezzlement investigation, an Illinois police officer staged a marriage between his son and mistress so that all three parties could steal money from the U.S. Army.

Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz was having an affair with a recently-divorced woman who could not afford to pay for health care benefits or groceries for her two children, the Chicago Sun-Times reports.

Investigators say Gliniewicz arranged for his son, Donald “D.J.” Gliniewicz, to marry the woman while he served in the Army. As a married man with two children to support, Donald would receive $1,750 per month. Investigators say Gliniewicz’s mistress would receive $500 and Donald would keep the rest.

They were married for one year before a dissolution of marriage was filed in 2014, records show.

While he helped his son steal from the Army, Gliniewicz apparently sought a hit man to kill a village administrator he feared would expose him as a thief, a detective told The Associated Press on Thursday.

Det. Chris Covelli said Gliniewicz sent a text in April asking a woman to set up a meeting with a “high ranking gang member to put a hit on the village manager.”

Gliniewicz sent another message in May saying he had thought of “planting things,” which made more sense after investigators found small packages of cocaine in Gliniewicz’s desk after he died, Covelli said.

The drugs were “not linked to any case that we could find,” raising the possibility that the lieutenant sought to frame the manager, Anne Marrin, as a drug criminal before she could expose him as an embezzler, the detective said.

“We never found any explanation why those drugs were in his desk at the police station,” Covelli said. Investigators also interviewed the gang member, and found no evidence the gang member and Gliniewicz ever talked, Covelli said.

Gliniewicz sent the texts after Marrin, the village’s first professional administrator, began auditing Fox Lake’s finances, including the Police Explorers program that authorities now say the lieutenant had been stealing from for seven years.

Marrin told reporters Thursday that she believed all of her dealings with Gliniewicz were cordial and never had any sense that he was angry with her.

She said she didn’t learn about the plots against her until after Gliniewicz’s death.

“It’s very unsettling. My concern is my family. It’s quite unbelievable and almost surreal,” she said, adding that police have assured her that she is safe.

Often called “G.I. Joe,” Gliniewicz was a respected figure in the bedroom community of 10,000 people 50 miles (80 kilometres) north of Chicago. His death on Sept. 1, moments after he radioed that he was chasing three suspicious men, prompted an intense manhunt involving hundreds of officers, and raised fears of cop-killers on the loose.

Two months later, authorities announced that he in fact killed himself to cover his crimes. Now authorities are also investigating his wife, Melodie, and Donald, an official said Thursday.

Melodie Gliniewicz helped her husband run the Fox Lake Police Explorer Post, which put young people interested in law enforcement careers through sophisticated training exercises. In a newspaper interview weeks ago, D.J. Gliniewicz, an Army soldier in his 20s, angrily dismissed suggestions that his father took his own life.

The official, who was briefed on the investigation, spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly.

A second official who was briefed on the investigation told the AP that Melodie and D.J. Gliniewicz were recipients of a separate set of incriminating text messages from the lieutenant that investigators released Wednesday when they announced the staged suicide.

The official also spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly.

The official said Melodie Gliniewicz was the person identified as “Individual #1” in the messages released Wednesday, who at one point suggests in a message that she and Joseph Gliniewicz may “need to hide the funds some how.”

The official said D.J. Gliniewicz was “Individual #2,” whom the officer appears to scold for spending money on personal items. At one point, the officer warns that person that not repaying money to an unspecified account means that person “will be visiting me in JAIL!!” In another message, the officer tells Individual #2 that he has thought through many scenarios involving Marrin, “from planting things to the volo bog,” a remote swamp in the area.

Authorities have refused to officially identify anyone beyond the lieutenant who is suspected in any crimes. They also declined to identify the woman Gliniewicz texted about the gang-hit in April, other than to say she is not in law enforcement.

The officer’s wife and four children issued a brief statement Wednesday through their lawyers, saying they were grieving. It did not mention suicide or thefts. The attorneys, Henry Tonigan and Andrew Kelleher, didn’t respond to voicemail and email messages sent Thursday.

As the probe into Gliniewicz’s death stretched on, suspicion grew that he had killed himself, but investigators publicly treated it as a homicide investigation until announcing Wednesday that he shot himself. The lieutenant fired first at his cellphone and ballistics vest, then inserted his handgun inside the vest and fired at his heart. According to the results of the investigation, he then fell forward as he was dying, scraping his face, which could have been an intentional effort to create the appearance of a struggle.

Lake County Major Crimes Task Force Commander George Filenko, who led the investigation, said the 30-year police veteran clearly intended to mislead investigators and had the kind of intimate knowledge of crime scenes needed to pull it off.

Recovered text messages and other records show Gliniewicz spent the money on mortgage payments, travel expenses, gym memberships, adult websites, withdrawing cash and making loans, Filenko said.

Marrin says she pressed Gliniewicz the day before his death to share an inventory of his program’s assets. He responded the next morning, promising to deliver it that afternoon.

Instead, he killed himself.

Just why he tried to make it look like murder remains unclear. Filenko said he didn’t know whether a suicide finding would prevent his family from receiving benefits.

The huge outpouring of grief in the village where the 52-year-old officer had long been a role model has been replaced by a sense of betrayal. Many tributes to their slain hero have come down. Some signs praising “G.I. Joe” have been replaced, one by a poster labeling him “G.I. Joke.”

ROFL.. YO Joe...
 
http://www.chicagotribune.com/subur...ake-cop-personnel-records-20151106-story.html

The Fox Lake police officer who died in a suicide staged to look like a murder had a troubled history at the department, including suspensions and allegations of sexual harassment and intimidation, newly released information from his personnel file shows.

Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, known throughout the community as a dedicated officer and mentor to young adults, grew worried he could face consequences for years of alleged theft from the youth program he ran, the Lake County Major Crime Task Force announced Wednesday.

A copy of Gliniewicz's personnel file released Thursday night also showed that Gliniewicz's record during his 30-year tenure with the department was more troubled than it appeared immediately after his death Sept. 1.

His file includes a 2009 letter to Fox Lake's mayor from anonymous members of the Police Department who said Gliniewicz's conduct and lack of consequences had "destroyed morale in the department."

Among their accusations backed up by other records in his personnel file was a report from May 1988 that Gliniewicz was found "passed out" in the driver's seat of his truck on the shoulder of a Fox Lake road, with the engine running and his foot on the gas. Officers took Gliniewicz home and towed his truck, but when he awoke later that day he had no memory of what happened and reported his truck as stolen to the Lake County sheriff's office. He later said he'd been drinking after playing volleyball with friends.

According to the letter reporting the incident, a sheriff's deputy said it "was not the first time that something like this had happened."

Three months later, he received a two-day suspension for failing to report for duty after he said he'd had a couple of drinks after a volleyball game with friends, according to records in his personnel file.

He also allegedly discussed hiring a hit man to kill a village official.

Detective Christopher Covelli with the Lake County sheriff's office said Gliniewicz wrote that he was "being forced to retire" by Village Administrator Anne Marrin and was "close to entertaining a meeting with a mutual acquaintance of (ours) with the word White in their nickname" in Facebook messages sent to a woman in April.

The woman, who is not being identified because she is not part of the ongoing investigation, claimed that the message referred to a "high-ranking motorcycle gang member," according to Covelli, and that Gliniewicz discussed hiring him to "initiate a hit" on Marrin.

But when investigators interviewed the gang member, he denied taking part in the conversation and "the lead hit a dead end," Covelli said.

Gliniewicz, 52, shot himself in a "carefully staged suicide" as it became clear his "extensive criminal acts," including seven years of theft from the village's Explorer youth police training program, could be exposed during a review of village finances and practices, Lake County Major Crime Task Force commander George Filenko announced Wednesday.

Other messages recovered from Gliniewicz's phone, which authorities revealed Wednesday, appeared to suggest threats against Marrin. During one exchange with an unnamed person in May, he wrote, "Trust me ive thougit through MANY SCENARIOS from planting things to the volo bog!!!"

Volo Bog State Natural Area is an extensive marshy area near Fox Lake.

Investigators looked into the possibility Gliniewicz's reference to "planting things" was connected to an evidence bag of cocaine found in his desk after his death, Covelli said. There was no indication the evidence bag was related to one of Gliniewicz's cases, or any open controlled substances cases in the department, but Covelli said authorities couldn't be certain what he intended to use it for.

On Thursday, Covelli said he could neither confirm nor deny that investigators were looking into any roles played by Gliniewicz's wife and oldest son, which The Associated Press has reported.

Other entries in his personnel file fit the image of the man laid to rest after a funeral that drew thousands to mourn an officer portrayed as a dedicated public servant who gave his life to the community.

Amid numerous commendations since he got his start with the department 30 years ago was a 2001 appointment by the local district of the Boy Scouts of America as leader of law enforcement Explorer posts in the Chicago area, and Gliniewicz received several letters from organizations that worked with the youth group he ran praising its conduct and his dedication to the group. Another letter writer said he thought he "wouldn't have made it" if Gliniewicz hadn't stopped to help him after he got a flat tire on a cold winter night.

But in 2003, a dispatcher accused him of talking about putting "bullets in her chest" and her body in a lake. In a letter reporting the incident, she said she felt threatened at the time but later concluded the comment was made in jest after she was behaving in an immature and disrespectful way and no longer believed it was a threat.

Two days later she sent another letter to the chief saying Gliniewicz had intimidated her by bringing a gun into the room where she was working and that given his previous comments she was afraid, upset and angry.

In Gliniewicz's report on the incident, he said they both laughed at the comment at the time and she later told him she did not feel intimidated or threatened.

A few weeks later, he was accused of giving himself access to a sensitive recording system without authorization.

Around the same time, the chief eliminated his position leading support services in part because of "problems with the communications division."

The chief warned him that similar actions going forward could result in disciplinary action, but there was no record of additional consequences related to the incident and he was later promoted to lieutenant.

The anonymous letter from fellow police officers also references a 2003 federal lawsuit in which former police Officer Denise Sharpe Gretz accused Gliniewicz, her former supervisor, of sexual harassment. The village's lawyers acknowledged in court papers that the woman engaged in sex acts with Gliniewicz five times in 2000 and that he was suspended for 30 days.

Former Fox Lake Mayor Ed Bender, who lost the 2013 election to current Mayor Donny Schmit, said he had no idea that Gliniewicz had a troubled history with the Police Department. Bender, who served as a village trustee for eight years before serving one term as mayor, said he was unaware that anonymous police officers had complained in 2009 about Gliniewicz's behavior in a letter to then-Mayor Cynthia Irwin.

Irwin could not be reached Friday morning.

"He was always very professional around me. He was very professional around the other trustees. I had a good relationship with him. It was always 'yes sir, no sir,'" said Bender, 78.

"I knew nothing about all this stuff that they're talking about. … It's beyond belief, trust me."

Bender said he had never seen Gliniewicz's personnel file.

"I didn't think I had reason to," he said.

"I'm sad. I am very, very sad for the whole village," Bender added. "I didn't know he was stealing."

When asked if there could have been more oversight within the department and the village, he said, "It's one of those things you can always second-guess. Looking back, it's probably something we should have done."
 
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bruh I didn't even hear about all the other new details til just now. How deep does the rabbit hole go? Gotta bring back the classic gif for this one:

gotdam.gif


this pig made Nic Cage in Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans look like a "Good Cop™" lmaoooooo

In 2003, a dispatcher complained Gliniewicz tried to intimidate her by bringing guns into the radio room after the two had a disagreement during which Gliniewicz allegedly told her he could put three bullets in her chest if she didn't stop acting foolishly.

and SIX seperate five day suspensions in ONE YEAR for "sexual misconduct"? The fuck.......?

twizza 77;8493587 said:
This dude was like Vic Mackey, but Vic wasn't a pussy tho when shit got real.

Nope, he was Shane. Except like.....more reckless.

stringer bell;8490105 said:

@"stringer bell" good look my nigga i was looking EVERYWHERE for that pic in high resolution. I need that shit on merchandise. Coffee mugs and hoodies, sup CafePress?
 
KCr9k8Q.gif


Why are the outspoken so quiet now?

Quick to point the finger at black people (even though he said two of the three men were white) yet can't except blame...
 

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