Johnathan Walker:Former Alabama police officer agrees to plead guilty in alleged drug planting scheme

2025-05-04 08:46:54source:Thurston Cartecategory:reviews

BIRMINGHAM,Johnathan Walker Ala. (AP) — A former Alabama police officer has agreed to plead guilty in connection with an alleged scheme to plant drugs on motorists, federal prosecutors announced Thursday.

Court records show that Michael Kilgore, a former police officer with the Centre Police Department, has signed a plea agreement on a charge of conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance. It describes how a package containing methamphetamines, oxycodone and marijuana was planted in a woman’s car with the help of a co-conspirator.

According to the plea agreement, the scheme began in early 2023 when Kilgore found methamphetamines and marijuana in a car and offered to let the driver avoid drug charges by working with him as a confidential informant.

“The driver accepted and became a co-conspirator in Kilgore’s drug-planting scheme,” U.S. Attorney Prim F. Escalona’s office said in a statement.

About a week later, Kilgore told the co-conspirator that he wanted to make a narcotics case and the two arranged for a package of drugs to be attached to the undercarriage of a vehicle, according to the plea agreement. On Jan. 31, 2023, Kilgore pulled the car over during for an alleged traffic violation and searched it and produced the drugs, prosecutors said.

RELATED COVERAGE Injured Ferguson officer shows ‘small but significant’ signs of progress in MissouriSouth Africa drops immigration charges against 95 Libyans arrested at a military-style campA trainee doctor is raped and killed in India, sparking protests and an attack at a medical college

Kilgore and his co-conspirator had planned a second drug plant, prosecutors added, but the co-conspirator discarded the drugs and reported the scheme to law enforcement.

The federal charge is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Prosecutors said their sentencing recommendation would credit Kilgore for acknowledging and taking responsibility for his conduct.

More:reviews

Recommend

Bet365 ordered to refund $519K to customers who it paid less than they were entitled on sports bets

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Online gambling company bet365 must refund more than a half-million dolla

Josh Heupel shows Oklahoma football what it's missing as Tennessee smashes Sooners

They say revenge serves best as a cold dish, but Josh Heupel’s moment finally arrived on a sizzling

Latest effort to block school ratings cracks Texas districts’ once-united front

A legal effort to block Texas from releasing school performance ratings has created a divide between