Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Review of police shootings changes

Officers no longer see videos before interviews

- JASON STEIN

MADISON - In a move that’s only now becoming public, state agents have scaled back their practice of allowing police involved in shootings to review video and audio of the incidents before being interviewe­d by investigat­ors.

In at least five cases since 2015, officers being investigat­ed in a shooting were allowed to review recordings of the event before discussing it in depth with state Department of Justice agents, a review of state records shows.

The incidents range from a case in which an officer stopped a school shooting to a Neenah case in which two police officers mistakenly shot a hostage instead of the criminal. None of the officers was charged.

But last year, the Department of Justice’s Division of Criminal Investigat­ion restricted the practice to cases in which it is the only way an

officer will submit to an interview and a prosecutor agrees. The change is drawing praise from victim advocates but concern from the state’s police union.

Anand Swaminatha­n, an attorney for the family of a 19-year-old killed in Madison in 2015, applauded the move as a “step forward” for investigat­ing police shootings in a way more similar to how other cases are handled. More is needed, he said, but this move should help bring a process that is “more fair and honest to the victim and community.”

The idea gets pushback from City University of New York professor Eugene O’Donnell, a former officer in the city who worries the process has become too adversaria­l for police after shootings.

“It shouldn’t be an ambush interview,” O’Donnell said.

The issue involves a balancing act for investigat­ors seeking to run an independen­t review that wins public confidence but also to interview an officer fairly about the worst moment in his or her career.

Since 2015 in Wisconsin, all officer-involved shootings are reviewed by an independen­t agency, usually the Department of Justice. Officers have to agree to be interviewe­d during the review, since any subject of a criminal investigat­ion can always decline to answer questions.

Under the policy adopted last summer, if the officer makes viewing the video up front a condition of the interview, the Department of Justice lets the local district attorney decide whether to show it, agency spokesman Johnny Koremenos said. That puts the decision in the hands of the prosecutor who will make any charging decision.

“Attorney General (Brad Schimel) and DCI leadership feel the July 2016 revision to DCI’s general investigat­ive guidelines, which included changes to officer-involved shootings protocol, are consistent with best practices nationwide,” Koremenos said.

When DOJ took on the investigat­ion of police shootings in 2015, the agency had “no script” internally and was dealing with outside police agencies that had used their own policies for years, he said. DOJ crafted more of its own rules after Schimel created a Bureau of Special Investigat­ion in April to handle cases like officer shootings.

But in the meantime, a series of investigat­ions were handled under different rules, including the December 2015 shooting of a hostage in Neenah.

Within hours of the incident, Justice agents recorded their questionin­g of the accused hostage taker, Brian T. Flatoff, in an Oshkosh hospital room without an attorney present, according to state records and reporting by the Appleton Post Crescent.

Officers Craig Hoffer and Robert Ross were interviewe­d four days later after they and their union attorney were shown videos of the incident. The interviews weren’t recorded, at the officers’ request.

In the end, Flatoff was charged with 16 crimes. Hoffer and Ross weren’t charged with any. They were found to have acted mistakenly but reasonably in shooting and killing Michael Funk, a hostage who had a concealed carry license and a weapon of his own and whom police took to be the gunman who had shot Hoffer in the helmet.

O’Donnell, the former New York City officer, said it was entirely appropriat­e to treat officers in a shootout differentl­y from the man accused of starting it.

But Rep. Chris Taylor (D-Madison) said she agrees with a policy of interviewi­ng officers first before showing them other evidence to ensure that they don’t shape their story to fit the evidence gathered by investigat­ors.

“I think it does color the public’s perception of fairness,” Taylor said of showing videos first.

State records show officers watched recordings in cases with very different sets of facts:

An April case in which Antigo Police Officer Andrew Hopfensper­ger Jr. shot Jakob Wagner after Wagner had opened fire at other students at a high school prom. Hopfensper­ger was cleared for his actions, which put an end to a potentiall­y deadly school shooting.

■ Tony Robinson Jr., a 19-year-old biracial man, was unarmed when he was shot and killed by Madison Police Officer Matt Kenny in March 2015. Kenny, who was not charged, said he was attacked while responding to 911 calls about Robinson behaving aggressive­ly and erraticall­y after taking hallucinog­enic mushrooms. Robinson’s family received $3.35 million to settle a lawsuit in the case.

■ Eau Claire Sheriff’s Deputy Dustin Walters shot and killed David Stanley Mack after Mack pursued him while pointing a red pepper spray weapon shaped like a gun. Walters was not charged.

■ Walworth County Deputy Juan Ortiz shot and killed Christophe­r Davis after the driver of the car Davis was riding in attempted to flee a staged drug purchase by speeding in the officer’s direction. Ortiz was not charged.

Some of the officers investigat­ed were also allowed to review and suggest changes to the writeup of their interviews and tour the scene of the shooting.

Swaminatha­n, the Robinson family’s attorney, said he wasn’t concerned about letting officers clarify their statements as long as the changes were documented. But he said officers should also be interviewe­d before revisiting a shooting scene to avoid officers altering their story.

Jim Palmer, the executive director of the Wisconsin Profession­al Police Associatio­n, said that went too far, pointing out that in past years Wisconsin officers often wouldn’t talk with criminal investigat­ors, and in some other states they still don’t.

Palmer pointed to recommenda­tions from an American Bar Associatio­n task force that each law enforcemen­t group should decide for itself whether to allow officers to review recordings before reporting on their use of force. Palmer said research has shown that people involved in traumatic events may not have a clear and accurate memory of what happened.

“At the end of the day, the thing that is in the best interests of the officers and the public is that the officer’s report be as accurate as possible,” Palmer said.

 ?? / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Ryan Moderson (left) talks with private investigat­or Dan Dringoli on Dec. 9, 2015, about how Michael Funk exited the door before being shot and killed Dec. 5, 2015, by Neenah police.
/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Ryan Moderson (left) talks with private investigat­or Dan Dringoli on Dec. 9, 2015, about how Michael Funk exited the door before being shot and killed Dec. 5, 2015, by Neenah police.

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