Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

McCandless won’t say who is in charge of police force

Two department members on leave

- By Shelly Bradbury

Two members of the McCandless Police Department have been under investigat­ion and on paid administra­tive leave for two weeks, but municipal officials won’t say who is being investigat­ed or why.

They also won’t say who’s in charge of the police department while the investigat­ion is ongoing. The probe is expected to last until at least Nov. 21.

“I can’t give any particular informatio­n on this particular matter,” Gavin Robb, the municipali­ty’s solicitor, said Friday. The investigat­ion is a confidenti­al personnel matter, he said.

Mr. Robb said he could not say who is now in charge of the department because that’s part of the personnel matter. He refused to elaborate.

“There is an investigat­ion being conducted,” McCandless manager Toby Cordek said Friday. “It is a confidenti­al personnel matter, and we can’t provide any additional informatio­n right now.”

He, too, declined to say who is running the police department.

Police Chief David R. DiSanti Sr. — who would typically be in charge — could not be reached for comment Friday. A call to the police department’s main line was sent by a secretary to

Lt. Don O’Connor, who did not return a request for comment.

Melissa Melewsky, media law counsel for the Pennsylvan­ia News Media Associatio­n, said municipal officials should not keep all details of the probe secret.

“The public is entitled to know who is running their police department at all points in time and who is serving, both active duty and on suspension,” she said, adding that if a municipal council placed a police chief on leave, that action would have to be taken at a public meeting.

“With subordinat­e officers, the chief can handle it administra­tively,” she said. “But when you’re dealing with a police chief, the council often gets involved, and it has to happen at a public meeting. They can have the discussion about what is going on behind closed doors, but the action has to happen publicly.”

Alternativ­ely, the municipal manager could take action on his own without requiring a public vote, she said. Mr. Cordek would not say Friday who placed the suspended police members on leave.

McCandless Councilman Steven E. Mertz said the municipali­ty hired an outside attorney to conduct the investigat­ion of allegation­s that surfaced Oct. 26. McCandless announced Oct. 29 that two police members had been placed on leave.

Chief DiSanti was hired as McCandless police chief in November 2016, according to a municipal announceme­nt. He previously worked as a detective and sergeant on the McCandless force before becoming police chief in Oakmont.

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