Albany Times Union

Police records focus of hearing

Statute blocking access to police disciplina­ry records re-examined

- By Brendan J. Lyons ▶ blyons@timesunion.com

Police union leaders squared off with advocates seeking greater transparen­cy from law enforcemen­t during a legislativ­e hearing at the Capitol examining a 43-year-old statute that has blocked public access to records on internal investigat­ions and alleged misconduct by officers.

Thursday ’s hearing, chaired by state Sen. Jamaal T. Bailey, followed a similar proceeding last week in New York City that has put the controvers­ial issue on course for review by the Legislatur­e when lawmakers return to Albany in January.

Bailey, a Democrat from the Bronx, has sponsored legislatio­n that would repeal the statute, known as “50-a” for its section in state Civil Rights Law.

“I think that before we can ask people to vote on something I have to be able to inform them, and this is one of the ways that I’m attempting to do that,” Bailey said this week about the hearings. They are the “first time that all of these folks are in the same room; I find myself being a consensus-builder. ... We should be able to have a peaceable conversati­on and I think this is the beginning of having a conversati­on.”

Michael O’meara, president of the state associatio­n of police unions, was f lanked by three other labor leaders — including for the State Police — as he outlined concerns that access to police disciplina­ry records could expose officers and their families to safety risks and result in the release of any complaints about them — even unsubstant­iated ones — in open courtrooms.

“We don’t want to get publicly f logged,” O’meara said. He claimed that, without the statute’s protection, someone could access a police officer’s personnel file and “tell everybody in the community.”

Richard Wells, president of the Police Conference of New York, cited similar concerns and asserted that even unfounded accusation­s against officers would remain forever in their personnel file and could be “thrown up in your face” if, for example, they were “testifying at a DWI trial 10 years later.”

Assemblyma­n Daniel J. O’donnell, a Manhattan Democrat and former criminal defense attorney, pushed back against some of the claims made by the police union leaders, noting that judges in court proceeding­s would not allow irrelevant or unsubstant­iated allegation­s against an officer to be aired in a public courtroom.

“Your testimony seems to give the impression that a defense law yer can ask a police officer any question they want,” O’donnell said. “That is not true. ... There are strict limitation­s on that informatio­n.”

Diane Kennedy, president of the New York News Publishers Associatio­n, and Diego Ibarg uen, an attorney for the Hearst Corporatio­n, which owns the Times Union, testified about the difficulti­es that news organizati­ons face due to the blockade that 50-a has created for journalist­s seeking to report on allegation­s of misconduct by police and correction officers. Firefighte­rs are also protected by the statute, although they rarely testify in criminal proceeding­s.

“Its expansion has drawn an opaque curtain over a category of records which are of vital public interest,” Kennedy told the panel. “Trust in law enforcemen­t is eroded when the law ser ves as a closed door behind which government agencies secretly handle allegation­s of abuse of authority.”

Kennedy cited several examples in which New York newspapers have been unable to obtain details on internal police investigat­ions, even for incidents that had taken place in public and were captured on video.

Ibarg uen cited several instances in which police agencies, including the Troy and Albany department­s, had wrongly used 50-a in an attempt to prevent the disclosure of records related to internal investigat­ions that courts later found should be made public.

One case from more than a decade ago involved a four-year legal battle by the Times Union to obtain the names of more than three dozen Albany police officers who — with the blessing of a former assistant chief — had used their department’s official letterhead to purchase machine guns for personal use by falsely claiming the weapons would be used in their official duties. That method of purchase also enabled the officers to avoid paying taxes on the gun purchases.

The state Court of Appeals eventually ruled unanimousl­y in favor of the Times Union and ordered the department to turn over the records, which were tagged with names of officers that had been placed on the machine guns as they were recovered during a secret internal investigat­ion. The Albany department had argued the tags were “personnel records” although no officers were discipline­d in that case.

In a more recent case, a federal magistrate ordered attorneys for the city of Troy to turn over a copy of an internal affairs report to the widow of a 37-year-old man who was fatally shot by a patrol sergeant in 2016. The city, citing 50-a, had claimed they were not obligated to disclose the existence of the report to the attorneys for Cinthia Thevenin, who filed a civil rights lawsuit three years ago against the city and the sergeant who shot her husband.

The internal report, which was hidden from the public and the Troy City Council, recommende­d sustaining four disciplina­ry charges against Sgt. Randall French, including unjustifia­ble use of deadly force and lying about the circumstan­ces under which he fatally shot Edson Thevenin. A federal magistrate admonished the city for its legal argument, noting 50-a is not applicable in a federal court proceeding and said the document should have been turned over in pre-trial discovery.

Ibarg uen told the legislator­s that Troy ’s attempt to wrongly use 50-a as a shield against disclosing the findings of their secretive internal investigat­ion is “hardly unique.”

At both legislativ­e hearings, lawmakers cited a 2016 Times Union article that looked at the origins of 50-a. The legislatio­n was never intended to block public disclosure of records on police misconduct, including documented criminal behavior, according to former state Sen. Frank D. Padavan of Queens, who sponsored the legislatio­n 43 years ago.

Padavan, who died a year ago, was a Republican state senator from 1973 to 2010. In the interview three years ago, he said, “If the law is being misused, then obviously an amendment might be in order.”

 ?? Photos by Paul Buckowski / Times Union ?? Senators Patrick Gallivan, left, and Jamaal Bailey, center, and Assemblyma­n Daniel O’donnell, right, listen to testimony from Diego Ibarguen, counsel with the Hearst Corporatio­n, and Diane Kennedy, president of the New York News Publishing Associatio­n, during a public hearing on 50-a in Albany on Thursday.
Photos by Paul Buckowski / Times Union Senators Patrick Gallivan, left, and Jamaal Bailey, center, and Assemblyma­n Daniel O’donnell, right, listen to testimony from Diego Ibarguen, counsel with the Hearst Corporatio­n, and Diane Kennedy, president of the New York News Publishing Associatio­n, during a public hearing on 50-a in Albany on Thursday.
 ??  ?? Michael O’meara, president of the New York State Associatio­n of PBAS, testifies in favor of protecting police records at a legislativ­e hearing held Thursday at the Legislativ­e Office Building in Albany.
Michael O’meara, president of the New York State Associatio­n of PBAS, testifies in favor of protecting police records at a legislativ­e hearing held Thursday at the Legislativ­e Office Building in Albany.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States