The Day

Documents show police officer was fired after lengthy sex misconduct investigat­ion

Groton City department wrapped up case in 2015

- By KAREN FLORIN

— Hector R. LeBeau stood Groton out among the 12 finalists vying for a position with the Groton City Police Department in 2007.

Raised in Meriden, LeBeau lived in Puerto Rico and Miami, but eventually settled back in Connecticu­t, according to City Council meeting minutes. Of Native American and Puerto Rican descent, he was fluent in English, Spanish and Lakota Sioux. He had coached youth sports.

He worked for a phone company for seven years before applying to become a city patrolman. He said he was willing to relocate to Groton City, which he considered a good place to raise a family.

LeBeau passed an oral interview, background investigat­ion, polygraph exam, physical agility test, and psychologi­cal and medical testing. He met the required entry standards establishe­d by the Police Officer Standards and Training (POST) Council.

The City Council voted unanimousl­y to hire him when then-police Chief Bruno Giulini presented him for approval.

Eight years later, documents obtained through a Freedom of Informatio­n request show, he was terminated by the department for repeat

edly engaging in sexual relations with women he met on duty, including a domestic violence victim and women who struggled with psychiatri­c and substance abuse issues.

The Day has been reviewing police accountabi­lity issues throughout the region in the wake of this past summer’s local and national protests of police misconduct and the General Assembly’s passage of sweeping police reforms during an emergency session this past summer.

Groton City provided internal affairs documents related to LeBeau’s Dec. 10, 2015, terminatio­n after redacting the names of the women and other identifyin­g informatio­n.

LeBeau’s terminatio­n letter, signed by then- Mayor Marian Galbraith, indicated he was being fired for just cause following a pre- disciplina­ry conference the previous day with union attorney Barbara Resnick, and Chief Thomas Davoren, who has since retired.

The police administra­tion concluded that Lebeau had violated city policies, rules and regulation­s, and its Canon of Police Ethics, listing four counts of conduct unbecoming a police officer and three counts of private conduct that fell short of the city’s expectatio­ns of a police officer.

“After reviewing the case, I can tell you he wouldn’t have been hired here now,” said Groton City Police Chief Michael Spellman, who has been chief since 2017. “We maintain very high standards here. I’m proud of the quality and diversity of the people who are currently serving this department. We’ve been able to get people of high quality and diverse background­s.”

Attorney Elliott Spector, a law enforcemen­t expert who trains and represents police officers, said that in the past police department­s did not share internal affairs records with potential new employers, but that for many years police department­s have been required to maintain the records, which are subject to disclosure under case law. In the past, it was common for police officers to resign rather than go through the disciplina­ry process then try to get jobs with other department­s.

The Police Officer Standards and Training Council is rewriting the policy on decertific­ation of police officers to comply with the state’s new Police Accountabi­lity Act.

The rewritten policy is expected to prevent decertifie­d officers from performing security officer work and to include new language pertaining to officers found to have engaged in discrimina­tory conduct, falsified reports or racial profiling. LeBeau was not decertifie­d.

Spector is not familiar with LeBeau’s case but said sexual misconduct is already included in the decertific­ation policy.

The top two reasons for officer decertific­ation on a so-called “black list” of decertifie­d officers in Connecticu­t maintained by the Police Officer Standards and Training Council are felony conviction­s and making a false statement.

‘I didn’t break any laws’

LeBeau, now 46, still lives in Groton. A father of three daughters, he was divorced by his wife in 2015, the same year his superiors conducted an extensive internal investigat­ion after receiving complaints that he was engaged in sexual relations with women he met while on duty.

Reached by phone this past week, LeBeau said he hadn’t done anything wrong, but had been targeted for terminatio­n after sharing unflatteri­ng informatio­n about then Deputy Chief Michael Guillot, who conducted the internal affairs investigat­ion.

“If I did have any relationsh­ip with any women, it was all on my time,” said LeBeau.

LeBeau appealed his terminatio­n and said the city offered to settle the case during arbitratio­n. He said he wouldn’t accept anything but being rehired by the department and walked away after two years.

LeBeau has not been decertifie­d as a police officer or charged with any crimes. He said he received conditiona­l offers of employment from other agencies, but decided he wasn’t ready to return to the job.

“Did I put myself in a bad situation? Yeah, I did,” he said. “I probably hung out with the wrong people. I didn’t break any laws. I was in the wrong crowd.”

LeBeau said he met one of the three women involved at one of the casinos. He provided The Day with a letter from the domestic violence victim, who has since moved out of state. The woman recanted her statements against LeBeau, writing that he was a profession­al officer and a kind person and that she had been coerced into making earlier statements against LeBeau by her abusive ex-husband.

He’s working as a per diem security guard at Connecticu­t College and in a temporary job at the Waterford post office.

The Connecticu­t College communicat­ions office issued a statement after The Day contacted the director of security and dean of students to inquire about LeBeau’s employment.

“Hector LeBeau is a parttime campus safety officer at the College who was hired in 2018,” said the statement from the College. “His employment, like that of every employee at Connecticu­t College, occurred after a thorough employee credential­ing process, including a criminal background check.”

Domestic violence victim

The woman who had been assaulted by her husband said she ran into LeBeau, sitting in his cruiser in a city park, a month after he was called to her home for the assault. She said he showed her pictures from his cruiser’s computer of her injured face on the night of the assault. She said LeBeau began texting her and told her if she ever wanted to see him, to just say so, since it was “boring” on the midnight shift. He gave her money and cigarettes, and eventually they had sex.

“I had just been a victim of a beating,” she said during an interview with Guillot and thenLt. Eric Jenkins. “I was told by DCF that my (kids) may be put up for adoption. I felt everything was out of control and I just had to give it to him. ...”

The woman wrote in an August 2016 letter to then-Chief Davoren that her husband had persuaded her to lie about her relationsh­ip with LeBeau and accompanie­d her to an interview with Guillot.

“He threatened me and manipulate­d me by creating a false narrative for me about what I was going to tell police,” she wrote. “In fear of what he was capable of, I complied with him.”

She wrote that she had since left the abusive relationsh­ip and moved out of state.

An offering of sage

Another female told police that after LeBeau went to her house for a report that she might hurt herself, she sought his advice and friended him on Facebook because she wanted someone to talk to. LeBeau eventually invited her to his apartment, where she said he pressured her for sex. When she refused to have intercours­e, he later messaged her to say, “U still owe me.”

“I feel betrayed by a police officer who I thought would give me help or feedback, but instead I was hit on and asked for sexual favors,” the woman told Guillot during the investigat­ion.

Her husband demanded an apology on her behalf and described LeBeau as “a predatory and socially inept man in a police costume.” When the husband was detained for an unrelated reason, LeBeau turned off a camera in the processing room after the man started asking him questions, according to the investigat­ion.

LeBeau told investigat­ors he had met the woman while she walked her dog in Washington Park prior to the medical call and that she had approached him in his cruiser twice to speak with him. He said he gave her a slip of paper with a number she could call if she needed help, and that because she told him she was into “herbal stuff,” he offered her sage, which he used for cleansing.

He said she came to his apartment for the sage and followed him to his bedroom when he went to retrieve the herb. He said they spoke for 10 minutes, then he drove the woman home on his motorcycle, and that they were just friends. The woman said LeBeau never spoke to her about sage.

A female arrested in May 2015 for an altercatio­n with a neighbor said loudly, in the lobby of police headquarte­rs, that she knew “Hector,” and that he had “informed her about how ( expletive) this place was.” The neighbor told a sergeant she had seen LeBeau park his patrol car and enter the woman’s apartment and knew of their sexual relationsh­ip. She said she was concerned that if another incident occurred, police would be inclined to arrest her because of the woman’s ongoing relationsh­ip with LeBeau.

The neighbor, who said the woman was known to be a “pill popper,” had said the woman had told her that LeBeau could get her anything she wanted.

LeBeau said he had met the woman a year earlier at the casino, and they had exchanged texts but stopped because she had a boyfriend. He said he saw her again when he went to her house for a stolen cell phone complaint and they began texting again. He said he didn’t know about her possible substance abuse problem.

LeBeau’s disciplina­ry history with the department indicated he was investigat­ed in 2009 and 2011 for beginning, or attempting to begin relationsh­ips with females after meeting them while on duty. One case involved texting a 17- year- old the same day he met her and the other involved a female he met during an on-duty call to a residence. In both of those investigat­ions, charges of misconduct on his private time and conduct unbecoming an officer were sustained.

“Did I put myself in a bad situation? Yeah, I did. I probably hung out with the wrong people. I didn’t break any laws. I was in the wrong crowd.” HECTOR LEBEAU

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