East Bay Times

Former officer admits to multiple crimes

Patrick James Berhan says he lied, stole, dealt steroids to other officers, destroyed evidence

- By Nate Gartrell ngartrell@bayareanew­sgroup.com

A former Pittsburg police officer has admitted he lied, stole from his employers, sold steroids to other law enforcemen­t officials and advertised his then-girlfriend's college cheating service to other cops, all while pretending to pursue a degree in criminal justice.

But instead of taking a college course in crime and punishment,

Patrick James Berhan is now getting a real life lesson. On Tuesday afternoon, Berhan, 30, pleaded guilty to three felonies: conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud and possession with intent to distribute anabolic steroids.

The final sentencing is yet to be determined, but Berhan is expected to receive far less than the maximum 20 years in federal prison that the most serious charge, conspiracy, carries under the law. His sentencing date has been set for July 2.

Berhan's plea agreement, read aloud by federal prosecutor­s in court, reveals new details not previously known to the public. It says that Berhan enlisted a woman he was in a “relationsh­ip” with at the time to take online classes with California Coast University for him, so he could receive education pay bumps the city of Pittsburg offered to employees.

Berhan has now become the third officer to plead guilty or no contest to a criminal offense in a massive police corruption scandal that has led to criminal charges against 14 ex-law enforcemen­t officers in East Contra Costa County. But he is perhaps the most significan­t defendant to plead guilty thus far; federal authoritie­s see him as a ringleader in a scam by six cops to fraudulent­ly obtain pay bumps from the cities of Antioch and Pittsburg, an allegation Berhan's defense team contests.

Berhan appeared in a federal courtroom in Oakland Tuesday afternoon, dressed in a black suit, while members of his family sat a few feet away. He appeared to listen carefully as an assistant U.S. attorney read through everything the government says it can prove, detailing fraud, lies, steroid dealing, and finally, an attempt to impede criminal investigat­ors by destroying evidence.

After listening to this, Berhan admitted to Senior U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White that it was all true. What the parties will debate at sentencing is whether Berhan played an “aggravatin­g role” by helping run the scam. Whether or not White agrees with that allegation may determine how serious of a sentence Berhan receives.

The plea agreement says that after successful­ly scamming the

system with his then-girlfriend's help, Berhan “promoted (her) services” to other cops, five of whom were later charged alongside Berhan with fire fraud. The agreement also says Berhan took anabolic steroids and sold them to other cops, including ex-Antioch and Pittsburg Officer Timothy Manly-Williams. Two former Antioch officers, Daniel Harris and Devon Wenger, still face steroidsre­lated charges in a separate case.

Berhan's plea agreement names his five co-defendants in the wire fraud case: Morteza Amiri, Samantha Peterson, Brauli Rodriguez-Jalapa, Ernesto Juan Mejia-Orozco and Amanda Theodosy-Nash.

Of them, Peterson has already pleaded guilty, while Rodriguez-Jalapa's legal problems have only gotten worse; he was arrested for allegedly driving drunk and threatenin­g Clayton officers earlier this year.

Amiri, a former Antioch K9 cop, is charged in a separate indictment with conspiring with two colleagues to attack civilians, including with dog bites and use of a gun that fires less-lethal projectile­s.

Berhan's plea agreement says that when he learned Manly-Williams had been placed on leave from the Antioch Police Department, he destroyed his cellphone data and cloud account, encouraged his exgirlfrie­nd to do the same and disposed of other evidence in a dumpster. It was all done to conceal his criminalit­y in the event that investigat­ors got wind of his

steroid sales to Manly-Williams and started looking at him, authoritie­s said.

The FBI and Contra Costa District Attorney were tipped off to the scam after one of the defendants' ex-girlfriend­s became mad at him and informed authoritie­s about it, multiple law enforcemen­t officials said. That led to the seizure of Antioch officers' phones, which in turn opened a separate can of worms: an ongoing scandal over racist text messages sent or received by dozens of current and former Antioch cops.

With all these lies in Berhan's past, he came to court Tuesday to tell the truth, and took an oath before Judge White began to question him. One of White's first questions was Berhan's level of education.

“High school,” replied Berhan, who remains out of custody.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States