The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Lawmaker raises questions about handling of cadet scandal

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. >> A senior state lawmaker on Wednesday questioned the handling of a cheating scandal at the Pennsylvan­ia State Police Academy and said he wanted an independen­t review into the dismissal of some cadets.

Rep. Joseph Petrarca, DWestmorel­and, raised the matter with state police brass during a House Appropriat­ions Committee hearing, about a month after the state inspector general’s office reported cadets had received test answers in advance from academy instructor­s, troopers and cadets from more senior classes.

In his comments to Commission­er Tyree Blocker, Petrarca said dismissed cadets believe they were punished for something they had been encouraged to do, looking at study guides from other cadet classes.

Petrarca, the ranking Democrat on the House committee that handles state police matters, said dismissed cadets believe that fellow cadets who ultimately graduated and became troopers did the same thing.

Former cadets had their lifelong dream of becoming a trooper taken from them, and “they certainly object to the way that was done,” Petrarca told Blocker.

Blocker did not answer Petrarca during the hearing. In an interview afterward, Blocker said graduated cadets did not do the same things as cadets who were dismissed.

“My fundamenta­l principle is cadets that resigned resigned of their free will and volition,” Blocker said. “Those that were dismissed were dismissed for cause.”

On the idea of an independen­t review, Blocker said, “we can certainly have some broader discussion­s regarding that.”

Petrarca did not say what sort of agency or organizati­on could provide the review. But, he said, he wanted to meet with Blocker about it.

With about 6,000 uniformed and civilian personnel, the Pennsylvan­ia State Police is one of the nation’s largest law enforcemen­t agencies.

More than 40 cadets from the academy’s 144th class, which began in September 2015 and was due to graduate in March 2016, were dismissed or resigned. No instructor, trooper or cadet from another class was dismissed, Blocker has said.

In its report, the inspector general’s office showed the state police cited 16 dismissed cadets for interferin­g with an investigat­ion. Fifteen were cited for providing false informatio­n. Many of the cadets categorize­d as resigned were cited for both violations, as well.

The state police began an internal investigat­ion after an academy staff member found a folded, handwritte­n piece of paper in a hallway in December 2015 that was determined to be a cheat sheet containing 20 answers on a traffic law test, according to the inspector general’s office. Blocker later invited the investigat­ion by the inspector general, which investigat­es complaints about fraud, waste and misconduct in state agencies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States