Albuquerque Journal

APD stands by hire facing accusation­s

Man was named civilian manager of APD’s RealTime Crime Center

- BY RYAN BOETEL JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The Albuquerqu­e Police Department is standing by its decision to hire a law enforcemen­t veteran once accused of racial profiling and excessive force in a nearly 20-year-old lawsuit. But a police spokesman said Friday evening that the department will reach out to New Jersey State Police — Leonard Nerbetski’s former employer — to get more informatio­n about his background.

Earlier this week, Nerbetski was named as the civilian manager of Albuquerqu­e police’s Real-Time Crime Center. In 1999, an Associated Press report named Nerbetski as one of two New Jersey State Police troopers accused of roughing up two law students, both minorities. The state later settled the case in an agreement in which it admitted no wrongdoing.

Mayor Tim Keller, at a news conference Friday, said Nerbetski previously ran a Real-Time Crime Center in New Jersey and was selected for his expertise.

He also said that Nerbetski was recommende­d to Albuquerqu­e by the Department of Justice.

Albuquerqu­e is currently underway with a yearslong reform effort brought on by an investigat­ion by the DOJ, which found police had a pattern of excessive force.

“We’re under a DOJ consent decree and the fact that he came to us through (the DOJ) says a lot,” Keller said.

Gilbert Gallegos, a police spokesman, said Nerbetski has a top-secret FBI clearance and had an otherwise unblemishe­d career. But he said the police department will still look into the old allegation­s.

Nerbetski will manage civilian crime analysts who work in the Real-Time Crime Center. He is expected to start Oct. 29.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States