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Illinois police chiefs group president under investigation over helicopter program

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He formed a nonprofit — Illinois Regional Air Support Service — and told the state it would become “a superstar in regards to meeting the currently unsupported needs of Illinois.”

The military lent him a 1960s-era surplus helicopter, which he equipped with a $170,000 federal grant. His nonprofit got area agencies to send money, usually $1,000 a town. He christened the program “Air 2” — a takeoff on the old state police Air 1.

Able to speed up to 115 mph, its rotors soon hovered above car chases and barricaded houses. And, outfitted with an infrared camera, it helped departments look for missing residents and fleeing criminals.

He was then lent a second military surplus helicopter and got a $295,000 federal grant for more equipment.

Some area chiefs saw a scrappy lawman tirelessly raising cash for an expensive program.

“The impression of chiefs was that he was almost fighting a windmill, that he was knocking himself out to get this done,” said longtime Orland Park Chief Tim McCarthy.

One thing not advertised: The Air 2 pilot often sent to help police had spent time on the other side of the law.

Court records on Swanson’s chief pilot, Kurt Kaiser, show:

In 1986, Kaiser was found guilty but mentally ill of felony criminal damage after police said he stole a helicopter from Midway Airport, flew it around his rural Will County home and abandoned it damaged at a nearby airport. When deputies came to his home, they found stolen construction equipment, leading him to also plead guilty to felony theft.

In 2002, federal prosecutors in a civil action accused Kaiser and his wife of defrauding a federal business loan program out of $715,000. The couple in 2003 agreed to pay a $371,000 fine.

Kaiser also declined comment. Records show he had just gotten approval for a private helipad in his backyard in rural Monee when Swanson began pitching Air 2 and the pair eventually stationed and fueled the helicopters there.

Swanson sponsored Kaiser for membership in the Airborne Law Enforcement Association. The association board’s president, St. Louis-area police pilot Kurt Frisz, told the Tribune anybody can join, but he was surprised that a chief sponsored a convicted felon, let alone put one in a cockpit.

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