RAW STORY
Caught on video illegally selling assault rifles and sensitive
information to undercover informants, a former officer of the year has
also been accused of secretly working for Los Zetas cartel in a drug
trafficking conspiracy in operation since 2006. Although the cop
allegedly provided the cartel with firearms, bulletproof vests, luxury
vehicles, police scanners, and database access, recently filed court
documents revealed at least two convicted cocaine traffickers are
cooperating with the government against the disgraced cop.
On September 2, 2014, Efrain Grimaldo, the nephew of Houston Police
Officer Noe Juarez, was sentenced to 33 years in federal prison after
caught smuggling 1,640 kilograms of cocaine throughout the southern
states and east coast. On June 24, 2014, Efrain’s brother, Sergio
Grimaldo, was extradited from Mexico and later charged along with
Officer Juarez for participating in a conspiracy to distribute five or
more kilograms of cocaine. Juarez was also charged in a separate conspiracy to possess firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.
In April, videos
surfaced of Juarez illegally selling firearms and sensitive information
to government informants posing as major drug traffickers. In March
2011, a hidden camera recorded Juarez selling assault rifles to an
informant. A second video recorded in July 2011 revealed Juarez running
license plates through the Houston Police Department (HPD) database for
an undercover informant who told the cop that the plate numbers belonged
to people who owed him $800,000 in drug money.
Juarez’s co-defendant, Sergio Grimaldo, pleaded guilty on September
23 and has begun cooperating with the prosecution against the former
officer of the year. According to newly released court documents,
the convicted drug traffickers have been participating in the
conspiracy to distribute cocaine from New York to Louisiana since 2006.
Besides providing firearms, pepper spray, bulletproof vests, luxury
vehicles, police scanner radios, and sensitive information to Los Zetas
cartel members, Juarez also allegedly attempted to release Efrain
Grimaldo from arrest by another officer.
Fired from the department following his own arrest, Juarez claims he
had no idea that his nephew was a member of the Zetas cartel. But as the
evidence continues to pile up with undercover surveillance videos and
co-conspirators testifying against him, Juarez appears to simply be
another cartel associate who successfully infiltrated the Houston Police
Department.
In September, Bullitt County Sheriff’s Deputy Chris Mattingly was
indicted for conspiracy to distribute more than a ton of marijuana.
Mattingly has also been accused of working for a Mexican drug cartel and threatening to kill the captain of the Drug Task Force investigating him.
During the LAPD Rampart scandal in the late 1990s, more than 70 cops
assigned or associated with the CRASH anti-gang unit were implicated in
police misconduct, including unprovoked shootings, planting false
evidence, excessive force, and theft. Subsequent investigations revealed
that several cops, including officers David Mack, Rafael Perez, and
Kevin Gaines, were actually Bloods who had infiltrated the LAPD in order
to gain a tactical advantage over rival Los Angeles gangs.................
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