The undercover cops who are selling iPhones on the street to get people to stop buying stolen iPhones
The goal is to reduce the market for stolen iPhones by scaring consumers away. The police say that in San Francisco half of all thefts involve stealing smartphones, and thieves often target women. The police are specifically establishing themselves in areas that they know are popular for selling stolen goods, like the corner of 7th and Market Street.
The teenager who used a fake ID with the picture of a cartoon character to buy alcohol as part of an undercover operation
The undercover agent who breached airport security with a mock bomb
According to the New York Post, the undercover agent was part of a four-person team drill at Newark, a major airport near New York City, which was the main target of the 2011 attack. The "bomber" had a mock improvised explosive device in his pants and was able to pass through a detector, and even a patdown by a TSA agent, allowing him to get to the airport gate and, in theory, board a plane.
In 2009, an al Qaeda-linked man tried to blow up a U.S. airliner over Detroit with a bomb hidden in his underwear, but the plan was botched when the device failed. Afterward, the TSA increased its use of full-body scanners to better detect explosives underneath clothing. It has since improved the scanners to allow more privacy with less life-like images.
The teenager who hired an undercover officer to kill his mother
Instead of delivering him the gun, the informant introduced him to an undercover detective who would possibly shoot his mom. When Carlos and the detective met each other, they made a $2,000 deal to shoot Dreama Chereza. The police said that Carlos expected to inherit the money from his mother's bank account.
Carlos requested that the shooting should look like a burglary and instructed the detective not to damage the television set during the attack. He gave the detective a key to the apartment, a map of the apartment, and a picture of his mom. The teenager was arrested immediately after meeting with the undercover detective on a charge of soliciting to commit first-degree murder. His motive was related to domestic problems within the family.
The man who broke into an undercover police car again and again... and again!
It turns out that both times he broke into undercover police cars!
Avon and Somerset Police regularly use unmarked parked cars around the city to catch criminals in the act following a spate of thefts. When the thief breaks in, a tiny camera photographs them, assisting officers in the subsequent arrest. According to the police, officers bait the vehicles with a bounty of tempting items for a thief such as satellite navigation systems, handbags, car stereos, and mobile phones.
The woman who was charged with a felony after posting an undercover cop's picture on Facebook
On Oct. 7, one of Walthall's friends told police that a photograph of a man appeared in her newsfeed and was labeled "Undercover Mesquite Narcotics" with the caption "Anyone know this b****." Investigators checked Walthall's Facebook page and issued a warrant for her arrest on harassment charges after they deemed her post to be a "viable threat to that officer's safety," the affidavit stated. Walthall refused to identify her friend. However, a computer search led police to George Pickens.
Pickens, 34, told investigators that he and his brother, Bobby Stedham, began researching the undercover officer online and found his Facebook page and photograph. They used the photo to make flyers featuring the officer with the intent to display them "like garage sale signs," according to the affidavit.
Stedham, 26, has also been charged with retaliation. Pickens faces drugs and weapons charges after authorities found 28.6 grams of methamphetamine in his room and an unregistered, sawed-off shotgun. Lawrence said that his group advises members of law enforcement to be very cautious about social media, if they must use it at all.
The undercover policemen who didn't recognize their own off-duty chief
"How you cannot know or recognize a chief in a department SUV with ID around his neck, I don't know," a police source said. Chief Douglas Zeigler, 60, head of the Community Affairs Bureau, was in his NYPD-issued vehicle near a fire hydrant when two plainclothes cops approached. One officer walked up on each side of the SUV at 57th Ave. and Xenia St. in Corona around 7 p.m. and told the driver to roll down the heavily tinted windows.
What happened next is in dispute. In his briefing to Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, Zeigler said that the two cops, who are white, had no legitimate reason to approach his SUV.
After they ordered him to get out, one officer did not believe the NYPD identification Zeigler gave him.
The robbers who targeted the wrong pizza delivery man, who was an undercover cop
Two delivery drivers were robbed in the same area a few days earlier. Police had asked restaurants to call if they received delivery orders for the neighborhood. A-1 Pizza received the call and notified police, who sent the officer in place of the usual driver.
Lt. William Fitzgerald said that two men, one with a BB gun, came up to the undercover officer and said they had ordered pizza. When the officer revealed himself, one man ran away but was captured shortly afterward. The suspects were "quite shocked" to discover that the delivery man was actually an officer. The police charged both men with first-degree robbery. They matched the descriptions of the men with those who had robbed drivers earlier. In both of those cases, the drivers were robbed of $60.
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