Chattanooga Times Free Press

Suspended officer returns to desk duty

- BY ZACK PETERSON STAFF WRITER – POLICE DEPARTMENT SPOKESWOMA­N ELISA MYZAL

“Modified [desk] duty allows the officer to work while providing the department with a productive employee during ... administra­tive investigat­ion ...”

A Chattanoog­a police officer suspended last month for punching and cursing a motorist has since been placed on desk duty and is presenting criminal cases to grand jurors that resulted in people being indicted.

Officer Benjamin Piazza is taking non-emergency phone calls from citizens and went to court this week to present cases to a grand jury, Chattanoog­a Police Department spokeswoma­n Elisa Myzal confirmed Wednesday. It’s unclear how many cases Piazza presented, or when, because grand jury proceeding­s are secret.

But court records show five people were indicted Wednesday for drug possession and DUI-related arrests that Piazza made either in 2017 or 2018.

Myzal did not give a specific reason for Piazza’s change in duty, which comes as the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion continues to probe his conduct for possible assault and official misconduct during a March 2018 traffic stop involving motorist Fredrico Wolfe. Piazza also faces an internal affairs probe in which Chattanoog­a investigat­ors likely are looking at his body camera footage and a use-of-force report he filed after the incident.

“Modified [desk] duty allows the officer to work while providing the department with a productive employee during the time they are under administra­tive investigat­ion and getting paid,” Myzal said in an email, adding the department can change someone’s paid suspension to desk duty.

Officers also can present cases to a grand jury when they’re on desk duty or paid suspension, Myzal said.

It’s not uncommon for officers on desk duty to review their cases with prosecutor­s, or return to court to ensure they don’t fall by the wayside.

The police department has to investigat­e every complaint, anonymous or otherwise, and many are unfounded or don’t result in serious punishment, allowing officers to return to duty.

But Piazza has misstated or exaggerate­d the facts in many cases, defense attorneys previously told the Times Free Press. His personnel files show he was demoted and suspended for 160 hours without pay in 2017 for lying to his supervisor and others about turning in evidence for about 40 DUI prosecutio­ns. Piazza’s former supervisor also accused him of lying about an August 2016 incident when he threw firecracke­rs at his colleagues while they were on an active call, the files show.

Melydia Clewell, a spokeswoma­n for District Attorney General Neal Pinkston and his attorneys, said she could not comment on Piazza presenting cases. She said officers under investigat­ion are typically on administra­tive leave and “therefore are unavailabl­e to present cases.” She added there are no rules covering which officers can or cannot present cases to the grand jury.

“That said, we only prosecute cases in which we believe the weight of the evidence would support a conviction,” she said. “We’re reviewing [Piazza’s] cases on a case-by-case basis, [and there’s] no set rule on how to handle.”

Piazza said he pulled Wolfe over for speeding around 3:30 a.m. on March 10, 2018, saw the 37-year-old toss something out of his passenger-side window and approached the car with his weapon drawn. Though body camera footage showed Wolfe seemingly complying with Piazza’s orders, the officer punched him about 10 times when Wolfe fell to the ground during the arrest.

Piazza charged Wolfe with DUI, drug possession and drugs for resale, resisting arrest, tampering with evidence and speeding. Pinkston dismissed all of those charges instead of seeking an indictment, and some defense attorneys say state lawyers aren’t prosecutin­g Piazza’s cases unless there’s an independen­t witness or another arresting officer.

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