Former Dunwoody Police
detective pleads guilty to running fraudulent warrant checks
A former Dunwoody Police detective
has pleaded guilty to disclosing sensitive law enforcement information in
exchange for receiving kickbacks for him and his family.
Robert Pasquale Bentivegna, 64, of
Woodstock, Georgia, pleaded guilty to computer fraud for accessing information
in the GCIC database for an improper purpose. Sentencing is scheduled for
June 1, 2015 before United States District Judge Leigh Martin May.
“It is a sad day when a career law
enforcement officer turns his back on decades of public service by selling his
access to sensitive law enforcement information,” Acting U.S. Attorney John
Horn said. “Bentivegna’s conduct undermines trust in law enforcement and
could have exposed the public to significant harm.”
Bentivegna, in exchange for valuable
personal items for himself and his family, performed searches and informed the
confidential informant about active arrest warrants listed under the
informant’s name in the Georgia Crime Information Center (“GCIC”) database.
Such information can be valuable
information to criminals, allowing them to flee before authorities can arrest
them. In exchange, over the course of approximately 18 months, Bentivegna
received airline tickets for his wife and him to travel to New York. His
daughter received a convertible car, which she used for over a year, and his
son received a car to drive for a period of time.
FBI Atlanta Field Office Special
Agent in Charge J. Britt Johnson said the FBI’s number one criminal
investigative program remains that of public corruption due to the vast harm
that it can cause.
“The guilty plea of former Dunwoody
Det. Bentivegna illustrates the betrayal of the badge by a very seasoned law
enforcement officer and the consequences that he now faces for this betrayal,”
Johnson said.
According to Acting U.S. Attorney
Horn, the charges and other information presented in court: In July 2011,
Bentivegna, a career law enforcement officer employed at the time with the
Dunwoody, Georgia, Police Department and who had also served as a federal task
force officer, began using an individual connected with a variety of illegal
activities as a confidential informant.
“Acts of corruption within the
Department of Homeland Security represent a serious threat to our nation and
undermines the integrity of all DHS employees, who strive to maintain the
integrity of the Department,” said James E. Ward, Special Agent in Charge,
DHS-OIG. “The Office of Inspector General and its law enforcement partners will
continue to pursue allegations of corruption and hold such shameless
individuals like Mr. Bentivegna accountable.”
Assistant United States Attorney
Garrett L. Bradford is prosecuting the case.
http://www.reporternewspapers.net/2015/03/23/former-dunwoody-police-detective-pleads-guilty-to-running-fraudulent-warrant-checks/
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