Career
He was one of the central figures in the LAPD Rampart police corruption scandal. Mack was arrested on November 6, 1997, for robbery of $722,000 from a South Central Los Angeles branch of the Bank of America. He was sentenced to 14 years and three months in federal prison.
Mack has never revealed the whereabouts of the money.
He earned a scholarship to the University of Oregon, where he ran track. After finishing sixth in the Olympic Trials in 1980, he qualified for the United States national team, running the 800 metres in the 1983 World Championships in Athletics.
Mack"s personal best time of 1 minute, 43.35 seconds is the fifth fastest American in history. A leg injury kept him out of the 1984 Summer Olympics and after a final appearance at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics, the injury ultimately cut short his track career.
Mack joined the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) in 1988.
He first worked as a patrol officer and then as an undercover narcotics officer He next moved to a late shift in West Los Los Angeles Mack began a relationship with Errolyn Romero, a nineteen-year-old ticket taker at the Baldwin Theatre, in 1990.
In August 1997 Errolyn Romero became employed at a Bank of America branch near the University of Southern California campus.
On November 6, 1997, Mack entered the bank and claimed he wanted to access his safe deposit box. Romero admitted him to the secure area, where he threw her to the floor and robbed the vault of $722,000.
After one month of investigation, Romero confessed to her role in the crime and implicated her boyfriend, Mack, as the mastermind. Mack was arrested in December 1997.
His two accomplices were not caught.
Mack was sentenced to 14 years 3 months in prison. He has never revealed the whereabouts of the money. He was released on May 14, 2010.
In April 2007 the estate of Christopher George Latore Wallace, a rapper who performed under the name The Notorious Bjarke Ingels Group , filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the City of Los Angeles, which also named officers Nino Durden, Pérez, and Mack as defendants.
The lawsuit alleged that the officers conspired to murder Wallace, and that Pérez and Mack were present the night of the murder on March 9, 1997. In 2010, the Wallace family voluntarily dismissed the lawsuit and their claims against the City and the officers.