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Uploaded: Friday, February 3, 2012, 10:52 AM Updated: Sunday, February 5, 2012, 11:26 AM
Former CNET cop to appear on 'Dr. Phil' show
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Photo
 | The former commander of a Contra Costa County drug squad won permission from a federal magistrate in Oakland Thursday to travel to Los
Angeles for what his lawyer says is an appearance on the Dr. Phil daytime television talk show.
Norman Wielsch, 50, of Antioch, is a former state drug enforcement agent who headed the Central Contra Costa County Narcotics Enforcement Team,
known as CNET.
He and former private investigator Christopher Butler of Concord face an array of drug and corruption charges in a federal grand jury indictment issued on Aug. 8.
Wielsch, who is free on $100,000 bail, asked U.S. Magistrate Laurel Beeler in a court filing Thursday morning for permission to travel with defense attorney Michael Cardoza to Southern California on Feb. 5 and 6.
Beeler signed an order granting permission Thursday afternoon.
Although Wielsch didn't give a reason for the trip, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hartley West, who opposed the request, said in a filing that she
learned from the court pretrial services officer supervising Wielsch that the purpose is to appear on the Dr. Phil show.
Cardoza confirmed Thursday that Wielsch's plan is to appear on the reality talk show hosted by psychologist Phil McGraw in Los Angeles.
"He's doing it," said Cardoza, who said Wielsch's interview will be recorded on Monday for broadcast in mid-February.
The attorney said Wielsch's aim in the unpaid appearance is to reach out to other law enforcement officers who may be under stress and
encourage them to seek psychological help.
Cardoza said the stress Wielsch was under at the time of the alleged crimes between 2009 and 2011 included neuropathic problems with his feet and anxiety over a daughter's medical problems.
Wielsch and Butler are accused in the federal indictment of stealing and then reselling marijuana and methamphetamine seized by CNET,
extorting payments from women in an illegal massage parlor they ran, and conducting phony sting operations in which they stole money and cellphones from prostitutes they identified from Internet advertisements.
— Bay City News Service Are you receiving Express, our free daily e-mail edition? See a sample and sign-up for Express.
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Posted by cardinal, a resident of the Diablo neighborhood, on Feb 6, 2012 at 7:46 am That clunking sound you hear is my jaw bouncing off the floor, repeatedly.
I have an alternative anatomical explanation to the "flatfoot" defense, and mine fits both his numerous alleged crimes and and this TV appearance. I'm thinking plural, about midway up the torso, and metallic.
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