Chicago Sun-Times

EX- CHICAGO COP ON TRIAL OVER ALLEGED TIP TO DRUG SUPPLIER ABOUT RAID

- BY JON SEIDEL Staff Reporter Email: jseidel@suntimes.com Twitter:@ SeidelCont­ent

After hunting the Conservati­ve Vice Lords street gang formore than a year, authoritie­s finally had the prolific drug dealers in their sights back in June 2014.

But then, poised to execute more than 30 arrest and search warrants, federal agents and Chicago Police officers suddenly heard nine devastatin­g words on the wiretapped phone call of amajor drug supplier: “We gotta homie that works for the task force.”

And that “homie” had a warning: “They gonna hit 1012 houses over there. And it’s coming soon.”

Assistant U. S. Attorney Shoba Pillay told a jury Tuesday “those words were shocking to those officers and agents.” She said the tip came from then- Chicago Police Officer Ronald T. Coleman, who allegedly breached “a circle of trust” and is now on trial for obstructio­n of justice charges in the courtroom of U. S. District Judge Charles Norgle.

Coleman’s lawyers say the feds only have two untrustwor­thy witnesses to tie Coleman to the tip.

“Ronald Coleman’s only interest was doing his job as a police officer,” MattMcQuai­d, one of Coleman’s defense attorneys, told the jury during opening statements Tuesday.

McQuaid said Coleman, 46, grew up and played basketball on the West Side — right where he wound up working with the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion on an investigat­ion of the Conservati­ve Vice Lords known as Operation Five Leaf Clover. When it appeared that aman he had played basketball with in high school would be caught up in the investigat­ion, Coleman allegedly warned that man’s cousin, who Coleman also knew from high school.

Coleman— who the Police Department says is no longer a Chicago Police officer — had allegedly spotted the man with Rodney Bedenfield, the Conservati­ve Vice Lords’ primary heroin supplier. Over the course of a year, Bedenfield had provided the gang with tens of thousands of user quantities of heroin, records show.

Through a chain of phone calls, word of Coleman’s alleged warning trickled back to Bedenfield. On a recorded phone call, an associate told him: “He say whatever ya’ll got going on, he say stop it and he’s like and just clean up. He say cause they got us coming.”

The tip didn’t do Bedenfield much good. Authoritie­s caught him lugging three bags in his car from a home in the 2100 block of South Spaulding to a home one block over in the 2100 block of South Christiana. So they searched that house too. And Pillay said they found what amounts to a “drug trafficker’s starter kit,” including at least five handguns, a rifle, 400 grams of heroin and several pieces of drug parapherna­lia.

Some of Bedenfield’s guns had laser sights, prosecutor­s have said. A duffle bag full of $ 83,000 cash was also found in his home, even though Bedenfield “has no legitimate employment history.” In the end, Bedenfield wound up with an 18- year prison sentence, records show.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States