Facing sentencing, convicted former Minneapolis police officer Ty Jindra now is admitting that he did in fact take and use drugs from people he pulled over in traffic stops.
"I am ashamed and feel extreme guilt for abusing my position to take pills from those I encountered on the street, and I admit to committing the crimes I have been convicted of," Jindra said, according to a court document filed Wednesday in advance of his sentencing.
However, the U.S. Attorney's Office responded in its own memorandum Thursday that Jindra is only admitting his guilt in an attempt to gain leniency.
"The court should give little or no weight to Jindra's conveniently timed expressions of contrition," Assistant U.S. Attorney Michelle E. Jones wrote in the memorandum.
A date for sentencing has not yet been set by U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank, who presided at Jindra's nine-day trial last fall.
The U.S. Attorney is seeking a sentence of three years and five months, at the top of the advisory sentencing guidelines range. Defense attorney Aaron Morrison asked for a shorter sentence, saying Jindra has learned from his mistakes and will carry the message of sobriety to other first responders and military veterans like himself.
A federal jury in St. Paul on Nov. 2 found Jindra guilty on three counts of confiscating drugs during traffic stops for his own personal use, and two counts of seizing drugs in violation of an individual's constitutional rights. He was acquitted on six other counts.
Defense attorneys Morrison and Peter Wold portrayed Jindra, who never testified during the trial, as a proactive police officer who operated in good faith and was eager to get major drug dealers off the streets. They said he gave breaks to small-time drug users in hopes of getting information and that he sometimes cut corners, throwing away the drugs he confiscated rather than turning them over to the property crimes unit.