Crime

State trooper charged with stealing Rolex, cellphones, child’s ADHD pills

Following an investigation that began in December, the Vermont State Police on Monday, March 20, cited a former state trooper on multiple felony and misdemeanor charges related to the theft of items in November from a personal property storage room at the Williston Barracks. In addition, the state police investigation into the conduct of Giancarlo DiGenova, 44, of Essex uncovered additional instances of stealing personal property from storage areas, using his position as a state trooper to gain access to these secure rooms.

DiGenova, who was most recently assigned as a road trooper at the Williston Barracks, was placed on paid relief-from-duty status on Dec. 19, 2022. The suspension occurred following the discovery that a bag containing valuables belonging to a person who had been taken into custody in late November could no longer be accounted for in the personal property storage room, and that it had gone missing on a day when DiGenova had accessed the room multiple times.

The bag contained more than $40,000 worth of items, including diamond stud earrings, a Rolex watch, a designer brand wallet and keychain, and Apple AirPods wireless headphones. A fellow trooper, aware of the missing property, subsequently reported to supervisors that DiGenova had showed him a Rolex that DiGenova claimed to have purchased on eBay. Through investigation, the Vermont State Police recovered the Rolex, valued at about $14,000, from the home of a relative of DiGenova in Massachusetts. The rest of the property remains missing. Charges in this case (22B1007703) are grand larceny, neglect of duty, false information to police, and unprofessional conduct.

During the investigation, state police learned of additional instances of missing property from storage areas that DiGenova had accessed. Additional detectives were assigned to the case to pursue these instances. According to court paperwork supporting the criminal charges, DiGenova took a bag containing seized cellphones in June 2021 from a secure personal property storage area at the Berlin Barracks, and subsequently attempted to sell two of the devices at an automated kiosk at the University Mall in South Burlington. DiGenova successfully completed one transaction. Evidence shows that he falsely marked the cellphones as “destroyed” in the state police’s property and evidence inventory tracking system. Charges in this case (23A3000233) are petit larceny, sale of stolen property, and neglect of duty. As elements of this case occurred in both Chittenden and Washington counties, prosecutions of separate offenses will take place in both jurisdictions.

In another instance uncovered by VSP, detectives found that during a response by DiGenova to a May 2022 call of a disturbance involving a juvenile at a private residence in Bolton, he took possession of several bottles of medication for ADHD prescribed to the juvenile and is believed to have stolen several of the pills. Charges in this case (23A3000813) are petit larceny, fraud or deceit, and neglect of duty.

Additionally, during the investigation, law enforcement reviewed DiGenova’s state email account and discovered that he was performing checks of vehicle identification numbers (VINs) on behalf of a household member’s car registration business. Although these VIN verification checks are required to be performed by personally inspecting the vehicle, DiGenova attested to completing two physical checks on out-of-state vehicles without ever seeing the vehicles involved. This case was investigated by the Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles Enforcement and Safety Division. Charges in this case (23MV000388) are two counts each of false swearing, neglect of duty, and applications to be under oath.

DiGenova was a trooper from 2009 until he resigned Feb. 7, 2023. His assignments included the Williston, Middlesex and Bradford barracks, and the Narcotics Investigation Unit.

Monday morning, March 20, 2023, DiGenova turned himself in at the Royalton Barracks for processing on the multiple charges. He was taken into custody, fingerprinted, photographed, and released with citations to appear in the Criminal Division of Vermont Superior Court in Burlington at 8:30 a.m. Thursday, March 23, and in Barre at 8:30 a.m. Thursday, April 6.

The Vermont State Police worked closely throughout this investigation with VSP’s Technology Investigation Unit and the Chittenden County State’s Attorney’s Office, along with the Washington County State’s Attorney’s Office and the DMV Enforcement and Safety Division. The Boston Police Department also provided assistance.

Further information regarding this investigation is contained in the affidavits of probable cause, which will be filed with the court and made public following DiGenova’s arraignment hearings. Members of the media should call the court clerks’ offices to confirm details of the proceedings.

Categories: Crime

4 replies »

    • So him being a criminal has nothing to do with this. Only ‘woke’?

      So, extrapolating this, arrest the ‘woke’ but release all criminals who are not ‘woke’ because, well, they are not ‘woke’.

  1. How did he get to be a trooper to begin with? Where did he come from? How do they check the background on candidates? I thought Vermont State Police were an elite group to be proud of? Fire the guy that hired him! Still have a high respect for them and thank them for their service.