

When the police are not doing officially state sanctioned criminal actions, you'll frequently find them moonlighting in non-state sanctioned criminal actions, such as this story from the AP details:

NYPD badges out, Kelvin Jones and the other armed men turned up out of nowhere at a New Jersey warehouse and began barking orders.



Jones told startled workers that the New York Police Department had sent the team there to inspect for counterfeit goods — even though the wholesale dealer of Prada, Versace and other fragrances was legitimate.



The men herded about a dozen employees into a tiny back office and tied them up. By then, it was obvious something was amiss.



"We were kind of shocked," one worker recalled. "We were like, why is the NYPD coming in here like this?"



Another blurted: "You're not cops."



But Jones was indeed an NYPD officer. In fact, he had held an elite undercover position.



Two with him were also part of the NYPD. A third was a former officer. But these were hardly "New York's Finest."



What they'd set up to look like a police raid was instead a brazen, $1 million robbery.



Eventually, the 30-year-old Jones would face trial. And his case, though largely overlooked, isn't isolated. In the past two years, prosecutors have accused officers of planting evidence in drug investigations, of running illegal guns, of robbing drug dealers, of routinely fixing traffic tickets as favors.



Still, Jones stands out because of his background as an undercover operative for the NYPD's Intelligence Division. The department credits the unit with thwarting numerous terror and other threats against New Yorkers.



Recent stories by The Associated Press have detailed how the unit also sought to infiltrate and monitor mosques, Muslim student organizations and left-wing political organizations — even beyond city limits — using methods that critics say infringe on civil rights, though the department denies it. Read the full report on this career criminal here.







