Within months of joining the Minnetonka Police Department, a young officer named Dan Saba won high praise from his chief for saving a woman's life on Christmas Eve in 1996.
Shortly before Christmas last month, that same officer sat in the Hennepin County jail on the verge of losing his job, addicted to pain medicine and awaiting sentencing on one burglary while being investigated in two others.
Strung out on Vicodin, Saba also has admitted to breaking into at least 10 homes last year looking for drugs. Many of those burglaries, he said, involved breaking into homes he'd responded to earlier while on duty as an officer.
"I have seen many officers make many mistakes of varying degrees," Robert Fowler, Saba's attorney and the general counsel for the Minnesota Fraternal Order of Police, said in court documents. "I have not seen a more tragic case involving the fall of a peace officer."
Those sentiments are echoed by friends, relatives, and colleagues who know Saba, arrested and convicted last year for burglary after breaking into a Chanhassen home looking for prescription drugs.
Saba, 38, was to be sentenced next week in Carver County District Court, but that has been postponed.
In the meantime, Saba also faces a burglary charge in Hennepin County District Court and a disorderly conduct citation in Carver County in connection with break-ins last month.
"It's a very complicated issue," said Minnetonka Police Chief Mark Raquet, who placed Saba on unpaid leave last year. "To navigate through this is difficult. I don't have any complaints about Dan as an officer. I would not describe him as a problem officer."