http://tinyurl.com/5h8dke

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During my 40-year New York City Police Department career, I held nearly
every rank and was detached to run large and troubled investigative
divisions of two major city and state agencies. Since retiring from the
department, I have taught college courses in criminal justice and consulted
or testified about police matters for such clients as Puerto Rico, the
District of Columbia, New York City, Newark, N.J., Chicago, the U.S. Justice
and State departments, and victims of police misconduct.

The controversy over Governor Palin's treatment of her former
brother-in-law, Alaska State Trooper Michael Wooten, and her dismissal of
former state commissioner of Public Safety Walter Monegan has led me to look
at the matter as if I had been retained by a client to do so. I have
therefore examined the full public record of the Wooten and Monegan cases,
including the Wooten investigative files and the recently issued Alaska
Legislative Council report that charged Governor Palin with an ethics
violation for her role in the dismissal of Monegan.

My conclusion is that the Wooten and Monegan matters reveal an Alaska
scandal, but one very different from what has been reported by the national
press. The scandal - and it is a serious one - involves the conduct of the
managers of Alaska's police agencies and the political officials who have
sought to defend them and attack Governor Palin.

*
The story begins with Wooten's probationary term as an Alaska State Trooper,
when he was found guilty of using official agency reports for personal
reasons - a serious charge that in a well-run police agency would have led
to an extended probation at the very least. It didn't, and Wooten was
routinely granted full civil service status after his first year.

During his next three years, Wooten committed an astonishing six additional
acts of misconduct, unrelated to Palin family complaints, for which he
received written admonitions and no meaningful punishment. The matter can be
simply stated that any department that treats seven findings of misconduct
during the first few years of a police officer's career by doing little more
than creating a papered and ignored personnel file can be categorically
defined as recklessly managed.

Then came the Palin family allegations. Those claims included Wooten's use
of a police Taser on a minor, death threats made against his father-in-law
(Governor Palin's father), a criminal hunting violation, public consumption
of alcohol while operating a marked police vehicle, repeated acts of
violence and alcohol abuse and unlawful steroid use. Given the seven prior
findings against Wooten, any well-managed agency would have treated each
allegation as a presumptive basis for dismissal and would have treated some
as bases for dismissal even for officers with impeccable records. Yet after
the department opened its investigation of the Palin charges, no action was
taken for more than six months. Only after Governor Palin's father
complained in writing was the investigator's report issued and it revealed
an investigation that I believe:

. Violated basic police investigative procedures by advising Wooten that he
was under investigation before the complainant or suggested witnesses were
interviewed. 

. Dismissed the drug charge on the basis of Wooten's self-provided lab
report that his testosterone levels were normal, and made no apparent effort
to find the "blue pill" supplier Wooten was alleged to patronize nor ordered
any independent lab tests even for the steroid use allegation that Wooten's
report did not negate.

. Disbelieved credible witnesses who alleged that Wooten was observed
drinking in his patrol vehicle.

. Ignored allegations of Wooten's alcohol and anger management problems, for
which abundant evidence existed.

. Accepted Wooten's excuse that he did not know it was a crime to use
another's hunting license. Faced with charges of an investigative whitewash,
the director of the Alaska State Troopers conducted her own investigation
and, after yet another five months, issued her findings. Her report failed
to take any note of the death threat charge that the investigator had
sustained or the allegations of Wooten's drinking and violence. Amazingly,
it accepted without comment the investigator's dismissal of the drug use
charges.

Nonetheless, the director found that:

. Wooten's seven prior misconduct charges needed to be taken into account in
assessing his overall fitness and found that Wooten's entire record
demonstrated "a serious and concentrated pattern of unacceptable and at
times illegal conduct occurring over a lengthy period."

. Wooten's Taser use on a minor "demonstrated extremely poor judgment and a
conscience [sic] choice .  [of a] very serious in nature . to violate the
department's standards of conduct." He was a departmental Taser instructor
"well trained in the . risks associated with use of the weapon on a child."

. Wooten had consumed alcoholic beverages while operating his police
vehicle, which "not only exposed the Department to liability, but further
demonstrates your lack of judgment, . lack of good character, . disregard
for law . and a profound disrespect for [your] responsibilities."

. Wooten committed the crime of unlicensed hunting, which was "exponentially
exacerbate[d]" by the fact that he was a wildlife crimes investigator when
he did so. She found "no question" of Wooten's knowing commission of a crime
and reported that Wooten "finally did admit that [his] conduct was illegal."
She concluded with a remarkable finding that damned her department far more
than it did Wooten himself: "It is nearly certain that a civilian
investigated under similar circumstances would have received criminal
sanction."

Despite those findings and the director's statement that Wooten's conduct
"will not be tolerated," she merely reassigned him from the Wildlife
Investigations Unit, warned him of dismissal if he repeated his behaviors
and imposed an indefensibly inadequate 10-day suspension. Worse still, and
in textbook demonstration of the department's managerial dysfunction, the
director responded to union pressure by reducing the suspension to five
days.

Given the department's record in the Wooten case, tragic police misconduct
cases have predictably occurred. Thus, the state has paid large liability
sums in the contemporaneous cases of an officer who was promoted after a
jury found him guilty of torturing a suspect with his Taser, another with a
prior record of undisciplined violence who remained unpunished even after
wrongfully killing a disabled suspect deemed unthreatening by his partner
and yet another who committed five rapes after the department failed to
investigate harassment complaints of one of his victims. 

Further, the indefensible double standard protection given Wooten for
conduct "nearly certain" to trigger criminal prosecutions against members of
the public apparently remains the department's norm. Recently asked how he
handled trooper hunting violations like Wooten's, the director of the
Wildlife Troopers Division said: "[M]ore often than not it goes into what we
call an administrative inquiry, and that's how the discipline is handled."

Even more revealing and damning has been former commissioner Monegan's
definition of the Palin family complaints as acts of harassment against
Wooten, and his stated belief that his primary obligation in handling the
case was to protect departmental morale. He said: "My job was to provide
passion and support to 900 people - almost 900 people - in the Department of
Public Safety, and one of them - who included Trooper Wooten - he was an
irritant to her [Governor Palin ]." The statement alone justifies Monegan's
dismissal, both for its clear indifference to the department's management
failings and its even less defensible failure to understand that Alaska 's
good police officers do not feel "support[ed ]" by widespread tolerance to
the rogue conduct of officers like Wooten.

The recently issued Alaska Legislative Council report is yet another
whitewash by state officials and offers further evidence of the state's
continuing refusal to accept the critical need for structural reform of its
police agencies and the performance of their managers. The report found that
Governor Palin had grounds to fire Monegan for reasons other than his
refusal to dismiss Wooten and further found that her action towards Monegan
"was a proper and lawful exercise of her constitutional and statutory
authority to hire and fire executive branch department heads."

Despite those determinations, the report made the catch-22 finding that the
governor had "violated her .  public trust" because her involvement in the
Wooten case was an "effort to benefit a personal . interest through official
action." The report's finding is thus that Governor Palin should not have
taken admittedly proper action against a police administrator who failed to
reform a department that, among other things, excused repeated acts of
admittedly intolerable officer conduct - including an act that would have
been "nearly certain" to lead to criminal prosecution had it been committed
by a civilian.

Wooten's conduct clearly merited his dismissal, and his case is among the
most poorly handled disciplinary matters I have ever encountered. Contrary
to the Legislative Council report, Wooten and Monegan hardly merit immunity
because their inexcusable conduct partially related to Governor Palin's
family. In fact, the governor's opposition to Alaska's police misconduct and
mismanagement and her efforts to deal with the state's "good old boy" police
culture greatly served its citizens and its honorable police officers. 

Edward Mamet is a retired New York City Police captain and a police
practices consultant.
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Some sanity enters the discussion.

- Bob



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