Hartford Courant

Cop’s suspension in Smith-fields case gets reversed

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BRIDGEPORT — An independen­t arbitrator says a police detective in Connecticu­t’s largest city should have his administra­tive leave reversed, after he and another officer were taken off the job earlier this year amid allegation­s of insensitiv­ity in their handling of separate cases in which Black women were found dead in their apartments.

In each of the two cases in Bridgeport, the families of Lauren Smith-fields, 23, and Brenda Lee Rawls, 53, said police did not notify them of the women’s deaths in a timely manner.

The arbitrator said he was “not convinced” the police department had proven “a condition exists to justify” placing Detective Angel Llanos on leave.

“The union provided a persuasive argument that the grievant’s actions (or inaction) related to the December 12th (case) were no different than his actions with other similar cases,” arbitrator Michael R. Ricci wrote in a ruling dated May 18.

Ricci, who said there was no evidence Llanos had violated the department’s death notificati­on policy, ordered the veteran officer to be offered 12 hours of overtime opportunit­ies to be made whole for the past 16 weeks he’s been on leave and eight hours of overtime opportunit­ies for each week until the city returns him to work.

Mayor Joe Ganim, a Democrat, released a video statement in January saying he had directed the department’s deputy police chief to place Llanos and Detective Kevin Cronin on leave while an internal investigat­ion into the handling of the women’s deaths was being conducted. He apologized to the women’s families, calling it an “unacceptab­le failure” if police department policies involving the death of a family member were not followed.

A message was left with Ganim’s office seeking comment about the arbitrator’s decision.

Brad Seely, president of the Bridgeport Police UNION/AFSCME Local 1159, urged the mayor and the city to abide by the arbitrator’s ruling.

“Arbitrator Ricci’s decision demonstrat­es Mayor Ganim acted inappropri­ately in ordering Detective Llanos, 33-year veteran with an impeccable career, to be placed on administra­tive leave for his response to the untimely and tragic death of Brenda Rawls,” Seely said in a written statement. “This was a clear case of the City denying an employee their rights under collective bargaining.”

The union has also filed a grievance concerning Cronin.

Public outcry over the women’s deaths and how they were handled prompted the General Assembly to recently pass a bill that requires law enforcemen­t to notify a deceased person’s family “as soon as practicabl­e” but within 24 hours after identifyin­g the body. The bill, which is awaiting Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont’s signature, also requires the Office of the Inspector General to investigat­e any failure to report a death as required by the bill

 ?? COURTESY ?? Lauren Smith-fields, shown in an undated photo, was found dead in her apartment in Bridgeport on Dec. 12 after a Bumble date. Her family says they didn’t learn of her death until nearly two days later.
COURTESY Lauren Smith-fields, shown in an undated photo, was found dead in her apartment in Bridgeport on Dec. 12 after a Bumble date. Her family says they didn’t learn of her death until nearly two days later.

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