Joseph Gliniewicz — the Illinois cop who committed suicide and tried to make it look like a heroic death in the line of duty — clashed for years with many of his own colleagues, who accused him of extraordinary misbehavior on and off the job, according to his personnel records.
Gliniewicz, 52, killed himself Sept. 1 and staged the scene to look as though he was killed by someone else, investigators say.
Thursday, investigators said Gliniewicz — a lieutenant who joined the Fox Lake Police Department in 1985 — also tried to find a a hit man to kill the village administrator, who he feared would discover that he had been embezzling from the department’s Explorers Program for children.
RELATED: Fox Lake Lt. Joseph Gliniewicz tried to ‘put a hit’ on administrator: Police
According to his personnel file, it wasn’t the first time Gliniewicz’s behavior had created serious friction in the department.
As early as May 1988, Gliniewicz was found passed out in his pickup truck along a local highway, with the engine running and his foot on the gas pedal, according to a sheriff’s incident report attached to his personnel records. The report quoted a Lake County deputy as saying “this was not the first time something like this has happened.”
Otherwise, for the most part, Gliniewicz’s record is filled with impressive reviews and commendations for about the first 15 years of his career.
In about 2000, the favorable citations dry up, although it should be noted that the file has several long gaps during which similar notices could have been entered.
It’s about that time, however, that a string of serious incidents began to happen.
NBC Chicago reported that in a 2003 complaint — which a judge dismissed in 2005 — a female Fox Lake officer alleged that Gliniewicz called her to meet him in a hotel room on Valentine’s Day 2000.
When she arrived, Gliniewicz gave her a box of chocolates, rubbed her shoulders and pressured her to perform oral sex, according to the complaint, which said Gliniewicz was her commanding officer at the time.
Attorneys for the city denied in court papers that the female officer was ever forced to do anything she didn’t want to, but Gliniewicz was suspended for a month.
In 2002, Gliniewicz’s position as commander of support services was abolished, effective the following year, because of “the recent course of events concerning you and the problems in the Communications Division.” Those events aren’t described.
A year later, in April 2003, a dispatcher, whose name has been redacted, filed a memo alleging that Gliniewicz made remarks “regarding putting ‘bullets in my chest’” and saying no one would find her body because “there are a lot of lakes around here.”
The dispatcher added that she knew that “Commander Gliniewicz was only joking with me at the time and would never harm me” — although “I don’t think law enforcement officials should joke about misusing firearms,” she said.








