The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Officer sues Blake for defamation

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NEW YORK — The police officer who tackled former pro tennis player James Blake in a mistaken arrest filed a defamation lawsuit Monday against the athlete, the police department and the watchdog group prosecutin­g his misconduct case.

Officer James Frascatore said in court papers that city officials didn’t support him after video surfaced of the 2015 incident outside a Manhattan hotel. He said Blake, of Fairfield, painted him as an “out of control and corrupt officer” in a book he wrote “Ways of Grace,” where the star athlete details the arrest.

“The recriminat­ions for mistakenly arresting a celebrity started immediatel­y,” according to the lawsuit.

Frascatore said he was initially suspended but then placed on desk duty. He alleges that a police watchdog group tasked with investigat­ing leaked his disciplina­ry record before the encounter with Blake, and then Blake suggested in television and in print interviews that Frascatore was somehow a dangerous, violent officer. Disciplina­ry records are supposed to be kept private by law.

“Blake’s defamatory statements about Officer Frascatore were circulated to millions of readers and viewers in print, on-line, and through mobile and social media,” the lawsuit says.

Police believed Blake was a suspect in a credit card fraud ring. He was tackled by Frascatore and handcuffed, but let go after officers realized their mistake.

The police commission­er at the time and the mayor apologized publicly to Blake. Frascatore was brought up on department­al misconduct charges, and police watchdog lawyers recommende­d he lose 10 vacation days as punishment for excessive force.

Blake’s mother is white, and his father is black; Frascatore is white. Blake has said he thought the incident was mostly about excessive force, but also about how communitie­s of color are generally treated. But the defamation lawsuit argues that Frascatore was actually the victim of discrimina­tion based on race, because he was cast as a racist.

“Plaintiff has been cast as a racist and a goon,” the lawsuit says. “Though this characteri­zation could not be farther from the truth, this public perception has not only led to his family fleeing their home in fear as a result of public threats to their safety, it has ruined a good man’s career, name and reputation.”

The lawsuit is seeking damages of $75,000.

 ?? Michael Nagle / NYT ?? Retired tennis player James Blake, left, was tackled and arrested by a police officer in a case of mistaken identity, in New York, Sept. 21, 2015.
Michael Nagle / NYT Retired tennis player James Blake, left, was tackled and arrested by a police officer in a case of mistaken identity, in New York, Sept. 21, 2015.

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