A New Jersey police lieutenant arrested for allegedly swiping
narcotics from the county prosecutor’s evidence room was slapped with a
50-count indictment that detailed the fallen cop’s misdeeds — including
$600,000 in bank deposits that didn’t come from his cop salary.
Kevin T. Matthew, 48, of Cedar Grove, has been suspended
from his job at the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office since his December 2023
arrest.
On Wednesday, the state attorney general’s office announced
a wide-ranging indictment that charged Matthew with stealing cocaine, heroin
and fentanyl marked as evidence — and in quantities “consistent with an intent
to distribute those substances,” officials said in a statement.
Matthew’s alleged crimes — which happened between January
2019 and November 2023 — included big bank deposits that added up to about
$600,000.
This money — deposited in small increments to not trip the
banks’ federal requirement to report transactions of more than $10,000 daily —
was “not derived from or traceable to his salary and compensation as a sworn
law enforcement officer,” the statement said.
“The alleged misconduct by the defendant represents a
stunning, tremendous disservice to the public,” New Jersey Attorney General
Matthew Platkin said in the statement.
“This case highlights the corrosive effects that corruption
can have on public safety and trust,” he continued. “Instead of making Bergen
County safer, the indictment alleges the defendant repeatedly withdrew from the
evidence vault large amounts of dangerous drugs that had already been seized by
law enforcement.
“This alleged conduct was a betrayal of this officer’s
colleagues, his agency, his community, and his oath, and the grand jury’s
findings reflect the severity of this alleged behavior.”
The drugs Matthew allegedly stole were related to nine
different criminal cases, the attorney general said.
Matthew has been charged with financial facilitation of a
criminal activity, possession with intent to distribute, official misconduct,
tampering with public records and other drug and financial crimes.
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