Ex-officer
makes plea deal in drug case
October 11, 2006
An outspoken former Miami police sergeant accused
of selling small amounts of steroids and an
erectile
dysfunction drug has pleaded no contest
to a misdemeanor charge of possessing a drug.
Prosecutors on Tuesday dropped felony charges
against Francisco Pichel, who agreed as part
of the plea deal to give up his Florida police
certification.
He was set to retire anyway, said his attorney,
Gregory Denaro. No conviction will appear on
his record.
Pichel was confident he would have been acquitted
but accepted the plea because ''it was basically
a dismissal of the case,'' Denaro said.
He was charged with the unlawful use of a communications
device and possession with the intent to sell
400 milligrams of liquid testosterone, and three
pills of Cialis.
Miami Maj. George Cadavid, who heads internal
affairs, said today that the plea deal was acceptable.
''Our biggest factor was that he give up his
certification, and he agreed to do that,'' Cadavid
said.
The former officer will also donate $2,500
to Kristi House, an organization that provides
services to child victims of sexual abuse.
Authorities said the arrest came after someone
tipped off police in March that Pichel was dealing
in illegal drugs.
Internal affairs detectives later wired an
informant and caught on video and audio what
appeared to be Pichel arranging and selling
two bottles of testosterone and three Cialis
pills for $340.
A self-described whister-blower, Pichel was
suspended in 2003 after allegedly leaking information
about a serial rape case investigation to The
Miami Herald. He was later reinstated after
several city commissioners complained.
In October 2001, he lost a whistle-blower's
lawsuit against the city and former Chief William
O'Brien that claimed Pichel was targeted for
retaliation after taking on a ''corrupt and
violent'' gang of officers.
Denaro today criticized Pichel's arrest, saying
the investigation was full of discrepancies
and investigators had vendettas. Cadavid dismissed
those claims.
''Everything was caught on audio and video.
The tapes speak for themselves,'' Cadavid said.
Source: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/15735213.htm
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