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The laundry list of charges against him stemmed from a series of incidents between 2013 to 2017. They suggested an alleged pattern of using the police service and police work for his own personal advantage, usually having to do with sex and women.

Internal affairs investigators alleged that Mallett used his position as an officer to “approach, intercept or accost” a woman. Police separately allege that he used his job and time as an officer to hit on a woman for “private advantage.”

Investigators also believed Mallett created fake calls for service so that he could have sex with a woman while he was on duty responding to the fake calls.

Mallett allegedly left his post as an officer while he was on duty multiple times to “engage in personal encounters” with “various female members of the public.” He is alleged to have even left a paid-duty job — that occurs on the private dime rather than the public’s — to have one such encounter.

Police allege that he used his work email to both ask for and send nude pictures, and “sexually explicit emails.”

He was also charged with falsifying police records by saying he was following up on a call for service that ended days before. The allegedly fake follow-up accounted for more than three hours of his on-duty time.

Police also alleged that Mallett faked being sick to get out of having to sign in every day as a suspended officer for five days in 2017 while he was out of town and that he separately used the police database, which contains private information, to check up on his co-workers and citizens. Once, he allegedly breached the database at the request of a friend.