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Former police officer gets 1 year in prison for lying about private security hours

He defrauded the Tower Grove South Concerned Citizen Special Business District out of approximately $50,000.

ST. LOUIS — A former St. Louis police officer was sentenced to a year and a day in prison after pleading guilty to federal fraud charges after he lied about hours worked as a private security guard for a taxpayer-funded security district.

According to a press release from State's Attorney Sayler Flemming, Brad Stephens pleaded guilty on Dec. 6 to three counts of mail fraud for defrauding the Tower Grove South Concerned Citizen Special Business District out of approximately $50,000 by lying on timecards. On Monday, he was sentenced to 366 days in prison.

RELATED: Former St. Louis police officer admits to lying about private security hours worked

Stephens, who had been a police officer with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department since 2014, agreed to work shifts as a security officer through City Wide Security. The press release said Stephens was assigned to work shifts patrolling the Tower Grove South area during off-duty hours starting in 2015. 

According to the press release, Stephens lied about hours and days worked. In 2018, he falsely said he worked 93 days, and in 2019, he said he worked 76 days that he did not. City Wide Security was paid about $50,000 from the Tower Grove South Concerned Citizen Special Business District, a taxpayer-funded entity.

Stephens entered a guilty plea on Dec. 6 before United States District Judge Sarah Pitlyk.

The case was investigated by the FBI and the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department.

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