The Day

Probe says no evidence of bias when rabbi was stopped

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Montpelier, Vt. (AP) — A Vermont state police trooper who pursued and pulled over a speeding New York City rabbi and ordered him at gunpoint to lie on the ground and then with other police handcuffed the rabbi’s family has been cleared of wrongdoing.

State police and the Department of Public Safety commission­er performed an investigat­ion of the nighttime traffic stop and found “there was no evidence from the investigat­ion to suggest his actions were based on any type of bias or profiling,” according to a statement they issued Friday.

The investigat­ion found it was so dark the trooper couldn’t see details of the vehicle’s occupants before trying to pull it over.

Trooper Justin Thompson clocked a vehicle behind him going at 83 mph in a 65 mph zone on Interstate 91 in Thetford on Aug. 8, the investigat­ion said. Thompson pulled over and put on his lights. Once the vehicle passed he tried to pull it over with his lights and siren, but the driver failed to stop for 4.5 miles.

After the car pulled over, police dashboard video released Friday shows, the trooper shouted from his cruiser for driver Berl Fink to get out and walk backward with his hands up. The trooper, who was holding a gun, ordered Fink to lie on the ground.

Thompson decided to initiate a “high-risk motor vehicle stop” because he was in a rural area late at night with no immediate backup nearby, the vehicle had failed to stop, the occupants’ actions were suspicious and the vehicle had been speeding, the investigat­ion said.

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