Los Angeles Times

Houston police chief out as inquiry continues

Troy Finner will retire amid an investigat­ion into thousands of dropped sex assault cases, mayor says.

-

HOUSTON — The mayor of Houston has accepted the retirement of the city’s police chief as the department investigat­es why thousands of cases including sexual assault crimes were dropped, a city spokespers­on said Wednesday.

Police Chief Troy Finner is stepping away after reports Tuesday that he was aware of a code used to drop the cases, years before acknowledg­ing its existence.

Mayor John Whitmire appointed Assistant Chief Larry Satterwhit­e as acting chief and will discuss Finner’s retirement during a City Council meeting Wednesday, according to spokespers­on Mary Benton.

Finner’s departure comes as police investigat­e the dropping of more 4,000 sexual assault cases, among more than 264,000 incident reports never submitted for investigat­ion due to staffing issues the last eight years.

Finner, who joined the

Houston Police Department in 1990 and became chief in 2021, announced the investigat­ion in March after revealing that officers were assigning an internal code to the unsubmitte­d cases that cited a lack of personnel available.

Finner apologized at that point, saying he had ordered officers to stop in November 2021 after finding out that officers had been using the code to justify dropping cases. Despite this, he said, he learned on Feb. 7 of this year that the code was still being used to dismiss a significan­t number of adult sexual assault cases.

On Tuesday, several

Houston TV stations reported that Finner was included in and responded to an email in 2018 referring to the suspended cases.

Finner posted a statement on X saying he did not remember that email until he was shown a copy of it on Tuesday. “I have always been truthful and have never set out to mislead anyone about anything,” Finner wrote.

“Even though the phrase ‘suspended lack of personnel’ was included in the 2018 email, there was nothing that alerted me to its existence as a code or how it was applied within the department,” he wrote.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States