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DETROIT, MI -- Weeks after multiple Detroit police officers were named in a lawsuit accusing them of conducting an illegal marijuana raid in Warren, and amid an ongoing FBI probe into wrongdoing by the disbanded Narcotics Unit, an officer is accused of stealing "Scarface" movie memorabilia during a drug raid last week.

"He was suspended," Detroit Police Officer Adam Madera said Wednesday. "I do not believe a warrant has been signed yet. That is still pending."

George Hunter of the Detroit News reports the theft involved a valuable "Scarface" movie shadowbox containing a photo of actor Al Pacino and bullets from the 1983 Miami mobster movie.

"He was actually turned in by another officer," Madera said.

Madera said the raid in question resulted in the seizure of $46,000 in heroin and 15 firearms from a home on Lamphere in Detroit.

There are at least two other pending investigations stemming from allegedly improper drug raids by Detroit police officers.

Detroit-based attorney Michael R. Dezsi represents a Warren couple who filed a lawsuit against the Detroit Police Department two weeks ago.

The couple, Timothy and Hatema Davis, claim on Dec. 28, 2013, six plain-clothes officers in masks with rifles drawn kicked in their front door, stormed into their home, handcuffed them and seized 50 marijuana plants, though they were never charged and no seizure documentation or search warrant was provided.

Timothy Hatema said he was taken to a seemingly abandoned building in Detroit and interrogated for five hours before being released.

More on the Warren marijuana raid

The lawsuit names Lt. Charles Flanagan, head of the defunct Narcotics Unit, Officer James Napier, Officer no first name listed in lawsuit) Novak and several John Does, as well as the Detroit Police Department, which Dezsi claims did not adequately train or monitor officers.

Napier, a married father of two, shot himself in the head while parked in front of his parents' Sterling Heights home on Jan. 22.

Detroit Police Chief James Craig, who shut down the Narcotics Unit and folded their duties into the Major Violations Unit last summer, suspended six officers in August related to a box of evidence taken during a marijuana raid but never logged.

Two other officers were suspended with pay in November resulting from the FBI probe.