The Reporter (Vacaville)

Ex-Oakland police chief appeals firing

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The former police chief for the city of Oakland who was fired last week over the alleged coverup of an officer's misconduct filed an appeal to what he says was his wrongful terminatio­n.

LeRonne Armstrong's attorney Will Edelman on Wednesday sent a letter to the city, officially beginning the process to challenge Mayor Sheng Thao's decision to fire Armstrong, Sam Singer, a spokesman for the former chief, said in a statement.

Singer said the appeals process would be handled by the city, which will have to assign a hearing officer to review the case and make a recommenda­tion about whether to uphold Armstrong's firing.

Thao fired Armstrong on Feb. 15, saying a probe concluded Armstrong and the department failed to properly investigat­e and discipline a sergeant involved in a hit-and-run with his patrol car who, in a separate incident, fired his service weapon inside an elevator at police headquarte­rs.

Thao first placed Armstrong on paid administra­te leave in January to review investigat­ions by the department's federal monitor that found the police chief responsibl­e for gross derelictio­n of duty in the sergeant's misconduct cases.

Armstrong argued the findings are without merit and publicly demanded his job back.

He has the support of some leaders in the Bay Area city that has seen a spike in crime and homicides in the last three years.

However, some community groups that have called for police reform in the city of 400,000 people applauded Thao's decision.

George Galvis, founder and executive director of Communitie­s United for Restorativ­e Youth Justice, said Armstrong's firing was a first step “in holding OPD accountabl­e for years of abuse and scandals.”

Armstrong was the 10th person to head the embattled police department in as many years.

The latest scandal threatens to extend two decades of federal oversight — the longest of any police department in the country.

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