Former McKeesport FOP Officer Sentenced, Ordered to Pay Nearly $1 Million Regarding Theft Scheme from Lodge 91

November 17, 2025 | Topic: Criminal

HARRISBURG — Attorney General Sunday announced that a former McKeesport detective who served as financial officer for Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) Lodge 91 has been sentenced to incarceration and ordered to pay back nearly $1 million to the lodge.

Joseph Osinski, 56, previously pleaded guilty to theft by unlawful taking, theft by deception, receiving stolen property, and dealing in the proceeds of illegal activity for using lodge funds for personal expenses.

He was sentenced Monday in Allegheny County Court to 9 to 18 months incarceration, followed by three years of probation. He was ordered to pay $967,160 in restitution to FOP Lodge 91.

“This trusted member of law enforcement betrayed public trust and trust among his peers, for years, by diverting nearly a million dollars in lodge funds for his personal use,” Attorney General Dave Sunday said. “This theft was particularly egregious as in one instance he stole donations that were to benefit a memorial fund for a fallen officer. The defendant’s repeated betrayal devastated the lodge’s viability and also left an indelible mark on hard-working law enforcement across the Commonwealth.”

Osinski served as the financial secretary of FOP Lodge 91 from 2020 to April 2024 and was one of three people with access to the lodge’s bank account.

In January 2024, an anonymous letter questioning the lodge’s financial status was sent to the FOP board members. Prior to that, other ranking members noticed that a lodge credit card was being used to purchase alcohol, hotels and other items that did not appear to be for the benefit of the lodge.

The Office of Attorney General investigation discovered that Osinski opened bank accounts at a separate financial institution using the name of the FOP, but he was the only owner and authorized user. He then deposited checks he received that were made payable to the lodge into those accounts.

Among the unaccounted for funds were checks written to the lodge intended as contributions to a separate memorial fund for an officer who died in the line of duty. Instead of putting the checks in the memorial fund, Osinski put the money into the bank accounts he created in the lodge’s name.

The case was prosecuted by Senior Deputy Attorney General Alex Cashman.

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