Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Inquiry of chief like any other, says LR mayor

Scott: Acting agency leader to get findings on shooting

- JOSEPH FLAHERTY

Little Rock Mayor Frank Scott Jr. during a city board meeting Tuesday indicated that an internal investigat­ion of the Dec. 31 shooting in which Police Chief Keith Humphrey fired his gun at a suspect would proceed normally under the chain of command leading up to the acting police chief.

In response to a question from a board member, Scott said “the city of Little Rock’s police chief is on administra­tive leave. We have a[n] acting chief of police.”

However, the mayor did not elaborate further.

According to the account of the shooting authoritie­s provided over the weekend, Humphrey was on patrol on New Year’s Eve along with other members of the command staff after he had initiated an all-hands-on-deck approach to the evening.

In the early evening hours, Humphrey reportedly encountere­d an armed disturbanc­e in the parking lot of an Asher Avenue gas station and fired his department-issued weapon at a suspect who had opened fire on another individual.

The suspect, 29-year-old Taz Hayes, was apparently uninjured when Humphrey fired his gun. She was later arrested and faces a first-degree battery charge.

The victim, 22-year-old Kelecia Mayo, was hospitaliz­ed in the aftermath of the shooting.

In a statement Saturday, Scott said, “This is an unpreceden­ted situation because it involves our chief of police.”

He said Humphrey had been placed on administra­tive leave and Assistant Chief Crystal Young-Haskins would serve as acting police chief.

At the city’s request, Arkansas State Police agents are investigat­ing both the chief’s use of force and the initial fight at the gas station that led to it.

State police officials are expected to submit a case file to Pulaski County Prosecutin­g Attorney Larry Jegley for a determinat­ion on whether Humphrey’s use of force was consistent with the law.

A news release from the Police Department said department officials would conduct a separate internal administra­tive investigat­ion.

During Tuesday’s city board meeting, Vice Mayor

Lance Hines raised the New Year’s Eve incident with a question about how the internal investigat­ion would proceed.

While noting that he did not “need particular­s,” Hines referred to the findings from an independen­t review of the Police Department conducted by the outside firm CNA.

Based on the evaluation, the Internal Affairs Unit “rolling up to the chief was not thought of as a good deal,” said Hines, who represents Ward 5. He went on to ask how the department would run the internal investigat­ion into the chief.

“If it’s not done by internal affairs, how are we handling that?” Hines said.

“Vice Mayor, we cannot discuss any topic of what you’re referencin­g, per …” Scott said, before Hines interjecte­d to say that was “not true.”

Hines said he was not asking for details of the investigat­ion.

“I just want to know if our internal affairs is going to do it, and then who are they going to report to, because they can’t investigat­e [the chief they report to],” he said.

In its final audit report released late last year, among other recommenda­tions, CNA recommende­d the department was to “reduce the discretion­ary power held by the Chief” when determinin­g a complaint’s investigat­ive path.

Administra­tive investigat­ions within the department take the path of either a divisional investigat­ion or an internal investigat­ion, with the latter used to examine all complaints of serious misconduct as well as incidents involving the use of deadly force, the authors wrote.

“[A]ll cases go to the Chief of Police for a determinat­ion of the investigat­ory path, and the Chief has ultimate decision-making authority on which path an investigat­ion will take,” the authors wrote. “Therefore, allegation­s that may be investigat­ed traditiona­lly as Divisional Investigat­ions may be elevated to an Internal Investigat­ion depending on the situation and the Chief’s judgment.”

The report recommende­d that under General Order 211, which governs internal investigat­ions, citizen complaints and discipline, the chief’s role should be limited to final decisions.

When reached by phone Monday, Humphrey said he would not answer questions about the shooting and deferred to City Attorney Tom Carpenter.

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