Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mayor nominates new head of Fire and Police Commission

- Alison Dirr

Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett has nominated Leon Todd, an assistant state public defender, to succeed Griselda Aldrete as executive director of the Milwaukee Fire and Police Commission.

His appointmen­t requires approval by the Common Council.

In a statement Tuesday, Barrett called Todd the “ideal candidate” to lead the commission, which has experience­d significant turmoil and turnover in recent years.

“I believe that he will bring the leadership necessary to oversee the Commission in an equitable and just manner,” Barrett said in the statement.

According to the city, Todd has been an assistant public defender in the Office of the State Public Defender Appellate Division since 2014, a role in which he has argued cases before the state Supreme Court. The statement said he had represente­d incarcerat­ed clients across the state.

He previously represente­d lowincome clients in cases involving housing, family, public benefits and consumer law when he worked as an attorney for Legal Action of Wisconsin, according to the statement. He remains on the organizati­on’s board.

He was raised in Milwaukee’s Sherman Park neighborho­od and went to Milwaukee Public Schools, according to the city.

He is also on the board of the Wisconsin Justice Initiative and a member of the Wisconsin Associatio­n of African American Lawyers, according to the city.

The commission’s responsibi­lities — particular­ly hiring, promoting and investigat­ing complaints — require it to function like other city department­s with a full-time staff, which includes the executive director.

The executive director has a powerful role but does not get to vote on issues before the commission. The salary range for the position is $103,000 to $145,000.

Aldrete was the third executive director since 2018. She announced in

July she was not seeking reappointm­ent and officially left her post at the end of last month. In making her decision, she spoke out about a toxic political environmen­t at City Hall, saying the climate there “sadly puts a premium on political point-scoring and conflict.”

Aldrete highlighte­d her work on the ACLU stop-and-frisk settlement agreement and the independen­t investigat­ions into police misconduct undertaken by the commission. But she came under criticism from Common Council and police officials as the commission faced high staff turnover, allegation­s of dysfunctio­n and struggled to complete routine tasks, such as promotiona­l testing.

Aldrete, the former president of Hispanic Profession­als of Greater Milwaukee, took the position in September 2019. She replaced LaKeisha Butler who stepped down as executive director after a little more than a year on the job because her family was relocating to Alabama.

Butler had replaced MaryNell Regan, who resigned in April 2018 because, as she put it, the mayor wanted to go in a different direction.

Under Regan’s leadership, the board of commission­ers became more independen­t in the waning days of former Police Chief Edward Flynn’s tenure, issuing their first directive, or order, to Flynn.

Regan’s resignatio­n came soon after two aldermen accused the Fire and Police Commission of violating the state’s open meetings law when it appointed now former Police Chief Alfonso Morales.

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