Former CPD Dispatcher Pleads Guilty To Contraband Scam

By Nick Gale, WLS-AM News

(CHICAGO) A former dispatch supervisor for the Chicago Police Department admitted in federal court today that she provided private government information to her boyfriend in an effort to help smuggle contraband into Cook County Jail.

Stephanie Lewis used her position in the City of Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communications to access law enforcement databases to locate the personal information of a corrections officer at the jail, according to a written plea agreement. Lewis provided the information to her boyfriend, an inmate in the jail who had schemed with the officer and others to smuggle in the contraband to sell to other inmates, her plea agreement states.

Lewis admitted in the plea agreement that she knew her boyfriend and the others used the information to threaten the officer with physical harm unless he continued with the scheme and smuggled additional contraband into the jail.

Lewis, 42, of Chicago, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit extortion. The conviction carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. U.S. District Judge Charles R. Norgle set sentencing for April 26, 2017.

Lewis’ guilty plea brings to five the number of defendants convicted in the case.

Lewis’ boyfriend Prince Johnson of Chicago has pleaded not guilty to conspiracy charges and is awaiting trial.

@ 2017 WLS-AM News

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