The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Philadelph­ia moves to fire 13 officers over Facebook posts

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PHILADELPH­IA >> The Philadelph­ia Police Department is suspending 13 officers with intent to fire them following an investigat­ion into offensive and sometimes threatenin­g Facebook posts, the police commission­er announced on Thursday.

The department had placed 72 officers on administra­tive leave in June after a nonprofit group published the results of a two-year review of personal Facebook posts or comments from officers in Philadelph­ia and seven other U.S. police department­s.

The team of researcher­s found officers from Arizona to Florida bashing immigrants and Muslims, promoting racist stereotype­s, identifyin­g with rightwing militia groups and, especially, glorifying police brutality. All the posts were public.

All but three of the Philadelph­ia officers now on leave face some form of discipline, from dismissal to reprimands, said Police Commission­er Richard Ross. He said the department considered several factors when deciding on discipline, including the officers’ constituti­onal rights and the integrity of the police department.

“I continue to be very disappoint­ed and angered by these posts, many of which violate basic human decency,” Ross said. “We need to move past this ridiculous hate that has consumed this country and has done so for centuries.”

Officers who were on track to be fired made posts or comments that advocated violence or death “against any protected class such as ethnicity, national origin, sex, religion and race” or worked to “erode the trust necessary for a police department to carry out its core mission,” Ross said.

Examples included posts with the words “Death to Islam,” referring to blacks as “thugs,” and homophobic memes which referenced violence, he said.

In total, the database found over 3,000 troubling Facebook posts by 328 active duty police officers, Ross said.

None of the officers was identified, and Ross said the suspension­s hadn’t yet begun because some of the officers were on vacation.

Mayor Jim Kenney joined the commission­er at a news conference to announce the findings of the city’s investigat­ion, which was aided by a private law firm.

“Building trust will always be our top priority,” Kenney said, calling the posts deeply disturbing and antithetic­al to what his administra­tion is about. “We will not allow this terrible incident to break down the progress we’ve made.”

All of the 72 officers put on administra­tive leave will get social media and profession­alism training, he said. The department is also looking at software that they could use to track and audit officers’ social media postings.

John McNesby, president of the Philadelph­ia police union, said the Fraternal Order of Police is disappoint­ed that the officers will be terminated without due process and they condemn racist and hateful speech in any form.

“We are currently meeting with each officer to prepare an appropriat­e response to protect our members’ rights under the contract,” he said in a statement. “The overwhelmi­ng majority of our members serve this city with integrity and profession­alism.”

Following publicatio­n of the database, St. Louis’ top prosecutor added 22 more names to a list of officers in that city who are not allowed to bring cases to her office.

In Phoenix, Police Chief Jeri Williams has moved some officers to “non-enforcemen­t” assignment­s while the department probes Facebook posts she called “embarrassi­ng and disturbing.” The database included nearly 180 posts tied to current Phoenix police officers that disparage Muslims, black people, transgende­r people and other groups.

 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Police Commission­er Richard Ross speak during a news conference in Philadelph­ia, Thursday. The Philadelph­ia Police Department is suspending 13 police officers with an intent to fire them following an investigat­ion into offensive and sometimes threatenin­g Facebook posts.
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Police Commission­er Richard Ross speak during a news conference in Philadelph­ia, Thursday. The Philadelph­ia Police Department is suspending 13 police officers with an intent to fire them following an investigat­ion into offensive and sometimes threatenin­g Facebook posts.

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