Baltimore Sun

Suiter death remains an open case for police

- Baltimore Sun reporter Justin Fenton contribute­d to this article. iduncan@baltsun.com twitter.com/iduncan

an Nikki Laska said. The review will take a few weeks, she said.

The chairs of the Independen­t Review Board said their investigat­ion had turned up new evidence, including a witness and additional forensic tests. The seven-member group was unanimous in its conclusion that Suiter killed himself, they said.

James “Chips” Stewart, the chairman of the panel, said he hoped the medical examiner’s office and the police would revisit the case carefully based on the report.

“It should be treated as newevidenc­e,” he said. “These agencies … should then use it to re-investigat­e to see whether these are in fact meritoriou­s and warrants a change in their findings or classifica­tions.”

Suiter died last November while purportedl­y conducting a follow-up investigat­ion into a triple homicide. Police initially treated the case as a murder investigat­ion, locking down the neighborho­od and offering a reward that eventually reached $215,000. But the panel concluded that based on forensic evidence, witness accounts and video, there could be no other conclusion than that Suiter killed himself with his police-issued gun.

The report found that police made some missteps in the handling of the evidence but that overall the investigat­ion was thorough.

“I’m proud of the investigat­ors,” Tuggle said. “There’s no case study for this particular incident. It’s rare that you would ever see a homicide detective die in the line of duty and have to have that investigat­ed by members of his or her own unit.”

The early stages of the investigat­ion were marked by confusion after personnel at Shock Trauma made a mistake about how Suiter had been shot. The medical examiner who conducted the autopsy caught the mistake a few days later, Stewart said, and asked, “Is suicide a possibilit­y?”

She was told by someone from the Baltimore police that it wasn’t, Stewart said.

At an earlier news conference, Mayor Catherine Pugh said she had read the report but wanted to have a chance to be briefed on it further before saying whether she accepted the conclusion that Suiter’s death was a suicide.

“I’m waiting to hear from the independ- Interim Police Commission­er Gary Tuggle, right, along with Independen­t Review Board members James Coldren, left, co-chair, and James Stewart, chairman. ent reviewers,” she said.

The report was especially critical of how then-Police Commission­er Kevin Davis handled the case, saying he misled the public about Suiter’s connection to the federal Gun Trace Task Force corruption investigat­ion.

Pugh said the Suiter case was not a factor when she decided to fire Davis in January, but said she, too, felt as though she had been misled.

“We’ve all been misled,” she said. “There is informatio­n in the report I did not get, absolutely.”

Davis this week defended his actions and said he told the detectives to follow the evidence, that suicide is possible but not probable, and that nothing has emerged to change his mind about that.

“Culturally, the BPD can’t live with the fact that there’s an unsolved murder of a cop on the books,” Davis said.

The report also stepped back and examined the Police Department’s ability to implement reforms, concluding that officials had repeatedly failed to learn from their mistakes.

James “Chip” Coldren, the panel’s cochair, said the department had been beset by a lack of consistent leadership — there have been three police commission­ers this year alone and the mayor’s staff are seeking to hire another — and that in the face of intense scrutiny in recent years the department has taken a “circling the wagons approach.”

“That insulates the department from change,” Coldren said.

Pugh said that whoever is hired to lead the department would have “full authority” to improve it.

“This Police Department has to undergo change,” she said.

But, speaking before the report was released, Councilman Brandon Scott, the chairman of the public safety committee, said the changes need to go further than a new commission­er.

He has been calling for the creation of a board of police commission­ers to directly oversee the department. He said officials need to make structural changes rather than responding to each individual crisis.

 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ??
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN

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