The federal charges include attempted possession of heroin with intent to distribute, which is a serious enough offense. But the fact that the controlled transaction consisted of more than a kilogram of the drug means that the woman now faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison with a maximum life sentence. In addition to the possession with intent charge, the woman also faces additional time for possession of a firearm in the furtherance of a drug trafficking crime. The gun was actually the ashamed cop’s service weapon, which she possessed as part of her uniform, and because she was on duty at the time of the transaction. This specific charge carries a minimum mandatory sentence of 5 years and a maximum life sentence, which can run consecutive to the intent to distribute charge. Clearly the U.S. Attorney’s Office is sending a message that this type of corruption will result in prosecution to the fullest extent of the law.
In addition to the two life felonies resulting from the controlled buy heroin transaction, the woman and her roommate also are charged with aggravated identify theft stemming from an unrelated fraud scheme. The women are charged with using police databases to obtain social security numbers and other personal identification numbers that the two had planned to use in order to illegally receive income tax returns from strangers. According to the criminal complaint, the same FBI informant used in the fabricated drug deal also posed as a tax preparer and accepted the personal information for more than 30 different people from the women. The identity theft charges carry a minimum mandatory prison sentence of 2 years, bringing the total minimum mandatory years to 17. Of course the minimum mandatory prison sentences are only applied if the defendant is convicted by way of a plea or a guilty verdict at trial. The U.S. Attorney has the authority to decide which charges to pursue, and by doing so can tailor a plea offer to the woman. While it is not likely that the woman will actually serve 17 years, it does seem like a prison sentence of at least 5 years, followed by probation is imminent for the disgraced Baltimore cop.
Benjamin Herbst is a federal drug crimes lawyer, who is available 24 hours a day for a free consultation. Contact Benjamin at The Herbst Firm today.