Saturday, January 09, 2010

Officer Johnny Rodriguez Now Accused of Stealing Boots

A Dallas police officer once fired – and subsequently reinstated – over accusations that he stole tires from the police auto pound is in trouble again after being accused of pilfering the belongings of a fellow law enforcement officer.

Officer Johnny Rodriguez, 33, was placed on leave this week as the Dallas Police Department's public integrity unit investigates an allegation that he took a pair of boots owned by a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper this week.

"There has been a complaint referred to us," said Assistant Chief Ron Waldrop, who oversees the department's investigations bureau. "We're investigating it, and we haven't come to any conclusions."

Rodriguez was already working under a cloud. When he was hired in 2002, he had been accused of stealing at his previous job, as a campus officer at Mountain View College. He was eventually cleared.

Rodriguez declined to comment about the latest incident and referred all questions to his attorney, John Haring. Reached Friday, Haring also declined to comment.

According to police officials, in the latest incident, the trooper left new boots with a jail trusty to be shined. When the trooper returned, the boots were gone. The trusty told authorities that a Dallas officer, subsequently identified as Rodriguez, had come by, wanting his shoes shined.

The trusty told authorities that he indicated to the officer that he needed boots that looked like the ones he was shining because those boots look better polished. The officer then left with the trooper's boots, officials said.

Rodriguez has denied stealing the footwear, police said.

In June 2006, Police Chief David Kunkle fired Rodriguez after internal investigators concluded he had taken a set of tires from the auto pound.

According to court records, a thief took four tires and four rims worth about $4,000 from a stolen vehicle at the police auto pound in April 2005. The victim later saw what he thought were his tires offered for sale on eBay.

A civilian employee told detectives that she had seen Rodriguez leaving the pound with two tires and rims from the stolen vehicle. Police also obtained cellphone records showing that he was in daily contact with the woman who had the tires placed on eBay.

Rodriguez denied the allegations, and a grand jury twice declined to indict him.

About six months after his firing, an administrative law judge ordered the city to reinstate Rodriguez with full back pay and benefits.

The order included no explanation of the reasoning behind the decision, which still bothers Kunkle.

"There was no way in the world that all this stuff could have happened without him being involved in the theft," Kunkle said Friday. "Out of all the disciplinary appeals and all the decisions, this was the one that most surprised and disappointed me."

The Rodriguez decision was among the last of a string of controversial police officer reinstatements. Since then, administrative law judges have become far less likely to give officers their jobs back, in part because of intense media attention and a stiffening of the rules in the city charter.

His case may also be indicative of another previous problem: flawed hiring practices that brought in officers with questionable pasts.

Employment records show a co-worker at Mountain View accused Rodriguez of stealing a big-screen television and taking tests from the school's testing center in 2002, shortly before his hiring as a Dallas police officer. Mountain View investigators cleared him of the allegation, and his supervisors recommended that Dallas hire him.

Since his 2007 reinstatement, Dallas police commanders have kept Rodriguez off the streets, assigning him first to the communications unit and later to the jail. He has also been suspended from working off-duty jobs.

Rodriguez recently requested a transfer back to patrol, but supervisors denied the request because Dallas County prosecutors informed them that Rodriguez could not testify in court proceedings.
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1 comment:

Incognito said...

I'd worry if I was a prisoner. Who does he know?