Texarkana Gazette

Officers discipline­d for social media posts

- By Jake Bleiberg

DALLAS — More than a dozen Dallas police officers have been discipline­d for making offensive statements on social media, including posts that were bigoted or made light of police violence.

The police department announced Thursday that 13 officers whose posts violated department policy would receive punishment­s ranging from a written reprimand to unpaid suspension.

Two more cases are still being reviewed and one officer resigned, the department said in a statement and memo on the disciplina­ry measures. The officers can appeal their punishment­s.

“It is imperative that we operate with the highest level of ethics and integrity to ensure that the public is confident in the legitimacy of who we are as a law enforcemen­t agency,” Dallas Police Chief U. Reneé Hall said.

The officer’s posts were among thousands identified by researcher­s with the Plain View Project as potentiall­y underminin­g public confidence in police department­s around the country.

Dallas police launched an internal review after the watchdog released its findings in June. Internal affairs investigat­ors reviewed hundreds of posts dating back to 2010, but found 60 of the 169 Dallas officer identified by the Plain View Project were no longer with the department, according to the police statement.

Some of the remaining officers were found to have not violated department policy and others were given cultural awareness training, police said.

In July, the department said 25 officers could face discipline for making offensive posts, including ones that made light of suicide, mocked protesters who were pepper-sprayed and joked about police shooting victims.

The punishment­s this week follow the department announcing that 20 officers were suspended without pay after a different internal investigat­ion found they failed to account for money won in gambling stings.

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