Hartford report finds no evidence of racial profiling
Saturday, September 4, 2004 at 07:23PM
TheSpook
Hartford's police chief told residents Wednesday that police were not
racially profiling people, even though a two-month internal
investigation failed to prove whether a lieutenant issued racially
tinged instructions to a subordinate. Lt. Stephen Miele, who was
accused of ordering officers to arrest pedestrians in the downtown area
if they were not white and not wearing suits, was demoted to sergeant
after the investigation found evidence of unprofessional behavior. During a shift meeting, Miele allegedly told police,
"The people who don't belong downtown should be stopped." When two
officers asked what he meant, they were removed from downtown duties.
One of the officers, John Szewczyk, was the one who filed the complaint
against Miele, claiming Miele told officers to arrest people downtown
"if they aren't white and they aren't wearing a suit." Miele denied
making the racially charged statement. The
31-page investigation report released Wednesday stopped short of
labeling Miele's behavior racist, saying the investigation did not
"clearly prove or disprove" the allegations. But Chief Patrick Harnett
said a review of police reports showed that minorities were not being
targeted. [more ]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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