City of Detroit Police Officer Michael Mosley, 47, of
Detroit, was indicted today by a federal grand jury on two counts of bribery
for taking $15,000 in cash bribes from a drug trafficker, United States
Attorney Matthew Schneider announced.
Schneider was joined in the announcement by Rainer S.
Drolshagen, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Detroit Field Office of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
According to the indictment, Officer Mosley is a nineteen
year veteran of the Detroit Police Department.
In April 2019, Mosley was a member of the Police Department’s Major
Violators Unit. During an April 3, 2019
search of a drug trafficker’s residence pursuant to a search warrant, Detroit
police officers, including Mosley, discovered two kilograms of heroin, one
kilogram of cocaine, and six firearms.
The drug trafficker then confessed to owning the three kilograms of
drugs to Mosley, and the trafficker signed a confession. Subsequent to the April 3 search, Mosley
remained in contact with the drug trafficker in an effort to secure the
trafficker’s cooperation concerning other criminal activity.
The indictment further alleges that, at a certain point, the
drug trafficker offered Officer Mosley a cash bribe of $15,000 in exchange for
not pursuing criminal charges based on the three kilogram drug seizure. Officer Mosley agreed to the deal. On May 2, 2019, Officer Mosley collected
$10,000 in cash, which the drug dealer had left for Mosley in the backyard of
an abandoned house in Detroit. On May
23, Officer Mosley accepted another $5,000 in cash left for him at the
abandoned house. In exchange, Officer
Mosley gave the trafficker the original copy of the drug trafficker’s signed
confession.
Each of the two bribery charges carry a maximum sentence of
10 years imprisonment and a fine of $250,000.
“Although the vast majority of police officers in Michigan
are fully dedicated to protecting the public, sometimes there is an infrequent
example of an officer driven by corruption and greed,” stated United States
Attorney Matthew Schneider. “I am
thankful to Detroit Chief of Police James Craig for his commitment to combating
corruption, so that the rare example of bribery does not overshadow the
outstanding work of so many other great police officers.”
“Officer Mosley allegedly engaged in conduct that betrayed
the oath he took to faithfully serve the people of Detroit,” said Acting
Special Agent in Charge Rainer S. Drolshagen. “His behavior should not take
away from the outstanding work done each day by the vast majority of law
enforcement professionals at the Detroit Police Department.”
The investigation of this case was conducted by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. The case is
being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney David A. Gardey.
An indictment is only a charging document and is not
evidence of guilt. A defendant is
entitled to a fair trial in which it will be the government’s burden to prove
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt
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