Gerald D. Pawling accused of stealing from evidence room to pave driveway
Updated at 4:50 p.m. with defense attorney’s comment
By Kathleen Brady Shea, Managing Editor, The Times
A former Coatesville Police detective, previously charged with stealing over $40,000 from the police union and Police Athletic League, faces new felony theft charges, Chester County District Attorney Tom Hogan said on Tuesday.
Gerald D. Pawling, 43, of Caln Township, has been arrested again, this time for stealing over $7,000 from the evidence room of the Coatesville Police Department, as well as an additional amount of more than $9,000 from the union and Police Athletic League, Hogan said.
“A desperate man will engage in desperate conduct,” said Hogan. “When the defendant fell into financial difficulties, he took care of his problems by stealing from his fellow officers, a charitable organization, and even the police evidence room.”
Pawling’s attorney, Daniel R. Bush, said his client would continue to cooperate with investigators, as evidenced by several interviews to which Pawling submitted. “However, these new charges are based on theories and conjecture that are untrue and unsupported, and we will fight those charges with everything we have,” Bush said.
Pawling was arraigned before Magisterial District Judge Jeffrey J. Valocchi, who scheduled a preliminary hearing for Feb. 27. Pawling remains free on $250,000 unsecured bail, according to court records.
Coatesville Police Chief Jack Laufer said he was once again saddened by the news. “As before, Pawling’s criminal conduct is a betrayal of the trust that the public willingly grants to its police in exchange for the ability to feel safe in their homes and communities,” said Laufer. “The investigative assistance provided by the Chester County District Attorney’s Office and the county detectives has been instrumental in the continuing investigation into the criminal conduct of Pawling.”
Pawling worked for the police department for 17 years, retiring in 2012. In the previous complaint, the defendant was charged with stealing over $40,000 from the Coatesville Police Benevolent Association ( CPBA) when he was its treasurer and the Coatesville Police Athletic League (CPAL), where he served as executive director.
In the new charges, the defendant is charged with stealing an additional $7,000 from the CPBA through payments on a Staples store account, the criminal complaint said. The items purchased by Pawling, the father of five children aged 11 to 20, included computer equipment and school supplies, “consistent with purchases for school-aged children;’ the defendant also is accused of stealing an additional $2,745 from CPAL to repave the driveway of his house, the complaint said.
Finally, the complaint accuses Pawling of stealing over $7,000 from the Coatesville Police Department’s evidence room, a theft uncovered when Chester County Detectives executed a search warrant at Pawling’s residence. In the bedroom of Pawling and and his wife, Stacey Pawling, detectives located two Coatesville Police Department evidence envelopes, one of which was hidden in a drawer with women’s underwear, the complaint said.
The other envelope, both of which were empty and included Coatesville Police Department case numbers and bar codes, was located in an envelope addressed to Stacey Pawling at Coatesville City Hall next to a dresser in the room, the complaint said. One envelope should have contained $5,500 and one envelope should have contained $307, the complaint said.
During an audit of the Coatesville evidence room started after the hiring of Laufer, Coatesville police officers discovered that $1,640 was missing from another evidence envelope, the complaint said. The Chester County Detectives matched two fingerprints from an internal plastic evidence bag inside the envelope to the fingerprints of the defendant; there was no reason for the defendant to have left fingerprints on that internal evidence bag, the complaint said.
“Once the defendant crossed the line of dishonesty by stealing, he never stopped,” said Hogan. “He fooled friends, colleagues, and the public for years, but now has been revealed as a common thief. The Chester County Detectives and Coatesville Police Department are to be commended for exposing the defendant’s conduct and bringing him to justice.”
The case is assigned to Deputy District Attorney Carlos Barraza, Hogan said. Anybody with further information should contact Chester County Detective Thomas Goggin at 610-344-6486. Asked whether other arrests or charges are possible, Hogan said “the investigation is still ongoing and active.”