Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Police probe off-duty cop, protester scuffle

Incident resulted in photograph­er concussion

- Sophie Carson

Milwaukee police have opened an internal investigat­ion into an off-duty officer accused of assaulting two protesters and how responding officers handled the initial investigat­ion at the scene.

The investigat­ion comes as the responding officers face criticism for what some at the scene Sunday evening said was an illustrati­on of “police-protectpol­ice culture.” The officers, they argued, were trying to downplay the scuffle that left a woman with a concussion and a man with a broken camera lens worth $700.

“It was very clear that they were attempting to just sweep this under the rug and not have it go anywhere,” the protesters’ attorney, Nicole Muller, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

In a statement Wednesday to the

Journal Sentinel, the police department pushed back against the criticism, saying the department’s internal affairs division — which later arrived at the scene Sunday evening — is “robust” and meets weekly with Chief Alfonso Morales to review the progress of internal investigat­ions.

“The Milwaukee Police Department holds our members to the highest level of integrity,” the statement read. “Any suggestion that MPD unfairly protects its members is a myth, as evidenced by the number of discipline­s, including dozens of discharges and lengthy suspension­s, ordered under Chief Morales.”

The department also said the incident is “under review in its entirety, which includes reviewing the actions of all members associated with the incident.”

Police have provided few details about what occurred in the encounter between Officer Matthew Willmann and protesters Sunday night in the 1000 block of North Old World 3rd Street. But according to videos and witness accounts, a woman with Willmann threw a drink at protesters marching nearby. And as photograph­ers LaTasha Lux and Sean Kafer approached Willmann, he swiped at their cameras. Lux’s camera hit her face.

As word of the scuffle gained traction on social media, some have called for the officer’s firing — including state Rep. Jonathan Brostoff, D-Milwaukee. Willmann has not been fired or placed on leave, according to the department.

Brostoff went to the scene Sunday night after police had arrived. He called the way the officers handled the situation “disturbing.” The officers refused to tell the alleged victims the accused man’s name and tried to persuade everyone to walk away and “forget” it happened, Brostoff said.

“Every step of this situation was really troubling,” he said.

Much of the tension centers around which party was the aggressor. The available video footage provides an incomplete picture of what happened before the punches from Willmann. Police at the scene apparently focused on whether Willmann felt he had to defend himself from an approachin­g group of protesters.

As Lux and Kafer demanded Willmann be arrested, one of the responding officers told them that “I’m not issuing citations unless everyone gets a citation,” said Muller, the attorney.

According to Muller, a supervisin­g detective gave officers orders not to issue anyone involved a citation. But responding officers did give Lux and Kafer disorderly conduct tickets. When Muller spoke to police officials Tuesday, they were “shocked” to learn the tickets were issued, she said. Police then voided the tickets, according to the department.

Muller was frustrated that her clients — victims of an assault, she said — would be “treated so horribly” and their stories would be doubted. Police initially weren’t writing any reports about the incident, Muller said.

She contrasted the situation to the usual way police would handle a woman

whose boyfriend had punched her, causing a concussion.

“The cops would have come and put her boyfriend … into handcuffs, booked him for disorderly conduct, domestic abuse, and would have referred it to the DA’s office right away,” Muller said. “That didn’t happen here at all.”

In such cases, the police chief typically decides on any discipline once the internal investigat­ion is complete.

Willmann has been with the department since 2001 and was paid more than $98,000 in 2018, according to the most recent city salary data available.

He could not be reached by phone

Wednesday for comment.

What exactly happened?

According to witness accounts, footage Muller provided to the Journal Sentinel, and a recounting of the event the Old German Beer Hall posted to its Facebook page:

Willmann and the woman were sitting at outdoor tables at the neighborin­g Milwaukee Brat House, 1013 N. Old World 3rd St., as a group of protesters moved west on State Street.

The woman left her table and walked to the corner of Old World 3rd and State to shout racial slurs at the passing protesters. She threw a drink at the group.

Willmann walked up behind her moments later to join her, then punched Kafer, a photograph­er who had stopped on the sidewalk. Kafer’s camera lens fell to the ground and broke.

Kafer, a filmmaker and lecturer at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and Lux, a profession­al photograph­er, have attended the recent protests for racial justice as supporters and to document the events.

Willmann and the woman turned around and walked back toward the restaurant, and the group of protesters followed down the sidewalk. Some protesters put their arms out and yelled at their fellow protesters not to engage and to instead turn back and continue the marching on State Street.

Willmann pressed his hands together and bowed several times at the group, and the woman waved at them and blew kisses.

As the two walked back to the restaurant, Lux walked toward them, snapping pictures. It’s unclear what occurred next, based on the available footage, but Muller, the attorney, said Willmann swung at her, pushing the camera into her face.

A doctor diagnosed Lux on Tuesday with a concussion, Muller said.

Lux was hit outside the

Old German Beer Hall, 1009 N. Old World 3rd St. Staff and some protesters pulled Willmann and the woman into the restaurant and called police, holding them until police arrived.

The two used to patronize Old German Beer Hall and were members of the restaurant’s “Stein Club.” The restaurant has now banned them from the property.

“Our staff acted admirably in quickly ending an escalating situation,” the restaurant said in a Facebook post. “We are extremely disappoint­ed in the behavior of these two individual­s, their actions put our staff and patrons in harm’s way. They also brought unwanted negativity to our business and neighborho­od.”

Critics worry officers’ behavior is common

Brostoff called out what he said was a “problemati­c” culture of protecting fellow officers.

And Muller said the Sunday incident could be one of many in which crime victims are mistreated by police.

“I can’t sit here and think that this is only happening to LaTasha,” she said. “How many other women of color or people of color call the cops because they’ve been victimized, and then they are treated as the aggressors or treated as the criminals?”

And while it’s easy to look at this specific case and think, “that’s messed up,” Muller said, it’s actually indicative of the larger issue of police mishandlin­g cases involving fellow officers, she said.

“I’m happy that things are coming to light in this situation,” she said. But on a broader scale — “It’s a far nastier picture.”

 ?? COURTESY OF ATTORNEY NICOLE MULLER ?? Officer Matthew Willmann, center, and the woman with him walk away from a group of protesters after witnesses say they hit one photograph­er, threw a drink into the crowd and yelled racial slurs at them. LaTasha Lux was walking toward the two, snapping photos, before she says Willmann punched her camera into her face and caused a concussion.
COURTESY OF ATTORNEY NICOLE MULLER Officer Matthew Willmann, center, and the woman with him walk away from a group of protesters after witnesses say they hit one photograph­er, threw a drink into the crowd and yelled racial slurs at them. LaTasha Lux was walking toward the two, snapping photos, before she says Willmann punched her camera into her face and caused a concussion.

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