A Chicago police officer and former University of Illinois quarterback was taken into custody Wednesday after he was allegedly caught stealing sports memorabilia from a store in Evergreen Park.
Christopher Pazan, 41, was arrested around 3 p.m. after he swiped roughly $300 worth of baseball cards from the Meijer superstore at 9200 S. Western Ave., according to Evergreen Park Police Sgt. Victor Watts.
A security guard had watched on video as Pazan tucked the cards into a yard waste bag, Watts said. Pazan paid for the bag, but not the cards.
A Chicago police spokesperson said Pazan has now been relieved of his policing powers. He had been assigned to the Morgan Park District and detailed to the central investigations division, which investigates arson, financial crimes, major crashes and car thefts.
Pazan’s attorney didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Pazan couldn’t be reached.
He broke records playing quarterback at Brother Rice High School in Mount Greenwood, becoming an All-American and a hot college prospect. His career at the University of Illinois was far less illustrious, though he started a handful of games, according to a biography on the school’s website.
He later coached at Illinois and St. Joseph’s College before joining the Chicago Police Department in 2015.
“I just felt as if I wanted something more; to do something more and to serve in a different capacity,” he previously told the Chicago Tribune.
Pazan has also played for the Chicago Enforcers, a football team of Chicago cops and other police officers who compete in a league for law enforcement officials.
He earns an annual salary of $111,804, not including overtime pay, according to city payroll records. But he has recently faced personal strife and financial hardships.
He’s in the midst of a divorce and was scheduled to appear at a hearing on Wednesday. His initial attorney in the case, Tania K. Harvey, has asked the court to force Pazan to pay $5,876.84 she says her firm is owed.
His current lawyers have said he’s refinancing the mortgage on his Beverly home to cover “the expense of attorney’s fees and the ultimate settlement of the case.”
Fifth Third Bank sued Pazan last August in an effort to recoup $4,019.18 he owed after taking out an installment loan, court records show. A process server couldn’t locate him to give him the lawsuit, and the case was dismissed in February.
JPMorgan Chase previously sued Pazan in September 2022, looking to collect $15,324.94 he owed. He agreed to pay $12,500 and did so by June 2024, records show.
Police applicants who have significant debts are often rejected from even entering the training academy, city records show. The screening is aimed at filtering out would-be recruits who may be prone to corruption or financial manipulation.
Pazan faces a misdemeanor count of retail theft, Watts said. His first court hearing was scheduled for June 23 in Bridgeview.