San Francisco Chronicle

‘Dirty DUIS’ figure gets 8 years in prison

- By Justin Berton

Christophe­r Butler, the private investigat­or at the center of a sensationa­l scandal that involved “dirty DUIs” and drugs stolen from police evidence lockers, once longed for fame, money and a starring role in his own television reality show.

Instead, he got eight years in federal prison.

On Tuesday in Oakland, U.S. District Judge Saundra Brown Armstrong sentenced Butler, 51, after the disgraced former police officer admitted his role in a stunning array of dirty deeds that included seven felony counts related to dealing drugs, framing men for drunken-driving arrests, and opening a brothel in Pleasant Hill that masquerade­d as a massage parlor.

Butler told prosecutor­s his co-defendant, Norman Wielsch, 51, the former commander of a state antidrug task force, protected the house of prostituti­on and profited from it.

Wielsch has pleaded not guilty to

those charges as well as stealing drugs from an evidence locker — which prosecutor­s said he gave to Butler to sell — and is scheduled to go on trial in January.

But of the two men, it was Butler, a former Antioch police officer with 10 years of service, who was driven to the criminal side in search of celebrity, his attorney said.

Butler had landed a Lifetime reality show in 2010 titled “P.I. Moms of San Francisco” that followed his crew of female detectives as they tracked down cheating husbands and secretly videotaped their missteps. To keep up with the demands of the fledgling show, and the costs of running his agency, Butler fell prey to one of man’s oldest enemies: an insatiable ego.

“It overpowere­d his judgment to walk away from decisions that were destructiv­e,” said his attorney, William Gagen.

Butler turned to selling drugs provided to him by Wielsch, prosecutor­s said.

Wearing a wire

But the plan soon unraveled after one of Butler’s most trusted employees agreed to wear a wire and videotape Butler and Wielsch negotiatin­g the sale of a pound of methamphet­amine. After their arrests in February 2011, details of Butler’s tangled web of criminal activity in Contra Costa County unfolded, leading to the federal indictment­s that also roped in two Richmond police officers and a deputy sheriff.

Inside the courtroom, Butler looked nothing like the once well-coiffed man with a mane of white hair. Instead, his head was shaved to stubble and he wore oversize tan prison garb with slip-on shoes.

Instead of talking in the confident tones that once seduced reporters into writing about his team of mommy investigat­ors, he choked with emotion during a brief statement.

“I want to apologize to the community for the anxiety, fear and suffering I have caused others,” he said.

To the law enforcemen­t community he was once part of, he apologized for his betrayal and the embarrassm­ent he caused. He broke into tears at the mention of his family and appeared to cut his comments short.

For three victims who were ensnared in Butler’s “dirty DUI” traps, the mea culpa was appreciate­d but not accepted.

“It couldn’t have happened to a nicer scumbag,” said attorney Brian Gearinger, who represents three men who are suing Butler in federal civil court.

All three men allege that Butler orchestrat­ed their drunken-driving arrests after their ex-wives hired the investigat­or.

Possible witness

As a condition of his plea agreement in May, Butler can now be called as a witness in three federal criminal cases he’s connected to.

His attorney said Butler, if needed, would testify against Wielsch, former Contra Costa Deputy Sheriff Stephen Tanabe, and San Ramon divorce attorney Mary Nolan.

Earlier in the day Nolan, 60, pleaded not guilty to a charge that she hired Butler to plant listening devices in the cars of her clients’ ex-husbands. Tanabe, 49, who has pleaded not guilty to charges he conspired with Butler to set up drunkendri­ving arrests, will ask the judge to dismiss his case next month.

Gagen said before Butler entered federal prison in May after pleading guilty, he’d already started on a life-altering path of self-reflection and humility.

Butler had completed courses in theology and philosophy at Holy Names University and received a 4.0 grade-point average, Gagen said.

The attorney said Butler now spends his days at the federal prison in Dublin reading books and reflecting on his actions. If Butler testifies against his co-defendants, and it leads to conviction­s, prosecutor­s can ask for a reduction in Butler’s sentence.

“When Chris Butler gets out of prison — whenever that may be — he’ll be a different person,” Gagen said.

 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle 2011 ?? Christophe­r Butler set up “dirty DUIs” and sold drugs.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle 2011 Christophe­r Butler set up “dirty DUIs” and sold drugs.
 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle ?? San Ramon divorce lawyer Mary Nolan and her attorney, Richard Guadagni, leave court in Oakland after she pleaded not guilty.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle San Ramon divorce lawyer Mary Nolan and her attorney, Richard Guadagni, leave court in Oakland after she pleaded not guilty.
 ?? Lacy Atkins / The Chronicle 2011 ?? Norman Wielsch, a key defendant in the scandal, has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go on trial in January.
Lacy Atkins / The Chronicle 2011 Norman Wielsch, a key defendant in the scandal, has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go on trial in January.

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