CHICAGO — Chicago pension officials want the Cook County state’s attorney’s office to investigate Gregory J. Serratore, a former paramedic who claims to be permanently disabled from an on-the-job injury in the early 1980s but has been working as a police officer for the Cook County Forest Preserve District for the past 21 years.
Serratore has collected more than $425,000 in disability payments from the city of Chicago since 1982, after injuring a hand while trying to fix a stalled ambulance.
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Several doctors have filed reports saying he was left permanently disabled, unable to return to work as a Chicago paramedic.
But after being injured and leaving the Chicago Fire Department on disability, Serratore went to work for the forest preserve district as a police officer.
The board members of the city’s Municipal Employees’ Annuity and Benefit Fund – which sends Serratore his monthly disability checks – voted Thursday to refer Serratore’s case to the state’s attorney for a possible criminal investigation.
Serratore, 55, of Crestwood, couldn’t be reached for comment.
This is the second time in the wake of a Chicago Sun-Times investigation into government disability pay excesses that city of Chicago pension officials have asked the state’s attorney’s office to investigate a city employee who has collected hundreds of thousands of dollars in disability pay.
Last month, the city’s police pension board asked the prosecutor’s office to open a criminal investigation of former police Officer Charles T. Siedlecki, who has taken up big-game hunting while collecting more than $700,000 in disability pay,
Siedlecki, 57, who now lives in LaPorte, Ind., has been off the job since he reported injuring a shoulder while chasing teenagers nearly 20 years ago in Beverly. Siedlecki says he couldn’t safely fire his police weapon.