A former suburban police officer admitted that he took part in a mob-related ring of criminals responsible for robberies, burglaries and setting off a giant pipe bomb that blew apart the offices of a video gaming company.
James Formato, 43, a husky, bearded former member of the Berwyn police department, appeared before U.S. District Judge Ronald A. Guzman and pleaded guilty to charges of racketeering conspiracy and conspiracy to obstruct justice.
Formato also gave federal prosecutors a potential witness with inside knowledge of the alleged crime ring, pledging to cooperate with the government's seven-year investigation in exchange for leniency when he is sentenced.
Seven other defendants, including reputed mob boss Michael Sarno, have pleaded not guilty to charges in the indictment.
The investigation began in February 2003 after a giant pipe bomb ripped through the Berwyn offices of a video gaming company. Prosecutors say it was a message from the mob to stop horning in on its highly lucrative video gaming monopoly in the western suburbs.
Formato admitted in his signed plea agreement that as a Berwyn officer he found out that federal agents were interested in a brown van that had been seen in the vicinity of the blast. He said that through a go-between he sent the information to Mark Polchan, a Cicero jewelry store owner and member of the Outlaws motorcycle club who is among those charged. Polchan has pleaded not guilty.
Formato also admitted that in the fall of 2002 he was paid $3,000 for transporting $150,000, some of it the proceeds of a burglary, across state lines to his father in Florida.
Formato also said he served as a lookout outside a west suburban residence while two men were inside burglarizing it. He said he warned one of the burglars later that police had an artist's sketch of him. He also said he took part in at least two other home burglaries.
The maximum sentence for each of the two charges to which Formato pleaded guilty is 20 years in prison and the maximum fine is $250,000. But under his plea agreement, his cooperation with the government could earn him a sentence of 60 percent of the low end of the sentencing range under federal guidelines -- 78 to 97 months by preliminary calculations.
Thanks to CBS2Chicago
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What a piece of work. First he is a dirty cop and then he becomes a rat. Hammer him, judge!
ReplyDeleteWow they got one guy, theirs still hundreds of MOB members free in this corrupt Chicago and the police are trying to cover up for their friends.
ReplyDeleteI can prove this including Leonard "male Prostitute" Cox,Fake burlary reports, people think Im making this up but I can prove it with his background check with his SS#, birthday and audio tapes. Crooked cops want to cover up this freak because everybody is going to be laughing at them. He's linked to the whole frame job.
Theirs hundreds of MOB members who got away with thousands of crimes.