NYPD Cop Arrested on Federal Drug Charges

There are a million excuses for police corruption -- that they're underpaid, that they suffer stress, that their wives hate them, that they eat too many donuts, that their kids hate them, and that liberals use them as whipping boys. Read the official reports to hear the dreary recitation of why those who administer the laws never seem to obey them.

NYPD Cop Arrested on Federal Drug Charges

Postby admin » Sun Aug 16, 2015 10:21 pm

NYPD Cop Arrested on Federal Drug Charges
by Andrew Emett
July 15, 2015

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A NYPD officer was recently arrested for allegedly peddling oxycodone to a drug dealer in Vermont. After 3 years of supplying the accomplice, the officer was arrested and suspended from the force.

An NYPD officer was arrested on Monday for allegedly supplying oxycodone to a drug dealer in Vermont for three years. The officer’s accomplice hid the pills inside bags of Skittles that he mailed to the drug dealer’s infant niece to avoid detection. Unbeknownst to the officer and his accomplice, the drug dealer had secretly been cooperating with the DEA.

According to the multi-count indictment, NYPD Officer Andre Clarke began illegally supplying his accomplice, Michael Foreste, with oxycodone pills in 2011. Instead of operating directly with the drug dealer in Vermont, Officer Clarke reportedly supplied the opiate painkillers to Foreste, who personally brought the pills to Dannis Hackney of Burlington, Vermont. Foreste also sent the pills through the U.S. Mail by hiding them inside bags of Skittles addressed to Hackney’s infant niece.

On supervised release for a December 2008 federal drug conviction, Dannis Hackney began secretly working for the DEA while Foreste continued personally delivering and mailing oxycodone pills concealed inside resealed Skittles bags to Hackney’s two-month-old niece. During a traffic stop in Vermont two years ago, officers found 650 oxycodone pills hidden inside Foreste’s boxer shorts. Convicted of possession with intent to distribute, Foreste was sentenced in December 2013 to one year and one day in federal prison but remained free pending his appeal.

On May 16, 2014, Hackney was arrested with 300 oxycodone pills in his possession. Hackney agreed to cooperate with law enforcement officials but neglected to inform them about the drug packages to his niece. On June 10, 2014, DEA agents obtained a search warrant to seize a package addressed to Hackney’s infant niece. Inside the package, the DEA agents discovered a stuffed animal, infant’s clothing, a baby’s bib, a small purse, and two bags of Skittles candies. One of the Skittles bags contained 305 oxycodone pills.

The following day, another package arrived addressed to Hackney’s niece. This box contained a chocolate bar, two packages of M&M candies, and one package of Skittles candies. Resealed with a heat-sealing device, the Skittles bag contained approximately 80 oxycodone tablets. Foreste had sent both packages from his mother’s residence in Valley Stream, New York.

A search of Foreste’s bank accounts revealed he had deposited roughly $130,000 between January 2014 and April 2014 even though Foreste was unemployed and living with his mother at the time. After Foreste was arrested in June 2014, prosecutors charged Foreste and Hackney with multiple counts of drug trafficking and money laundering.

On July 7, 2015, a federal grand jury in Burlington handed down a multi-count indictment charging Officer Clarke, Foreste, and Hackney with the Vermont oxycodone conspiracy. Suspended from the NYPD, Clarke is accused of supplying the drugs to Foreste and Hackney, who sold the oxycodone pills to Burlington area addicts. If convicted on the oxycodone conspiracy charge, each defendant faces up to 20 years in prison. The money laundering counts for Foreste and Hackney also carry a maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment.
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