One member of the Metro Gang Strike Force allegedly stored illegal drugs in his file cabinet.
The force's office manager was being investigated in connection with the disappearance of several watches.
Also probed was the sale of a throne-like chair, seized in a raid, to a Strike Force official to give to his wife.
These are among the leads that internal affairs officers from three law enforcement agencies have pursued as investigations quietly continue into the activities of the members of the defunct and disgraced Metro Gang Strike Force.
Because the FBI is conducting a separate criminal investigation, it has declined to provide law enforcement agencies with files it has obtained. Those agencies have had to file data requests with the lame-duck Strike Force advisory board.
The Star Tribune obtained copies of the law enforcement inquiries under the Minnesota Data Practices statute.
Some of those involved have already been disciplined. Former Strike Force officer David Garman was fired by the Minneapolis Police Department. Another Minneapolis officer on the Strike Force, Randy Olson, resigned while under investigation. The Strike Force's office manager, Cindy Gehlsen, was fired by the Ramsey County Sheriff's Department.
Two Ramsey County deputies and a Minneapolis police officer were suspended. No St. Paul officers have been disciplined, though that department's internal affairs inquiry continues, said Sgt. Paul Schnell, St. Paul police spokesman.