Daily Press

Virginia Beach sheriff removed from shooting investigat­ion commission

- By Alissa Skelton Alissa Skelton, 757-9959043, alissa.skelton@pilotonlin­e.com.

VIRGINIA BEACH — Sheriff Ken Stolle will not be allowed to serve on the state commission created to independen­tly investigat­e the 2019 Virginia Beach mass shooting.

The Virginian-Pilot reported last week that Stolle had been appointed, at his request, as a commission­er by the Senate Rules Committee.

But the clerk of the Virginia Senate said Stolle should not have been selected for the position because elected officials aren’t allowed to serve on the 21-member board.

Susan Clarke Schaar, the Senate clerk, said the error occurred as a result of an oversight by her staff, which had a long list of appointmen­ts to get through and did not notice that the legislatio­n excluded the appointmen­t of elected officials.

Stolle was informed Wednesday evening that he was not eligible to serve and that he would be replaced, Clarke Schaar said. Stolle said he is disappoint­ed, but understood.

Last week, Del. Kelly Convirs-Fowler, D-Virginia Beach, said Stolle’s appointmen­t was “a clear conflict of interest,” because his office responded to the shooting on May 31, 2019, that ended with 13 deaths, including the gunman, and four people severely wounded. Another person with direct ties to Virginia Beach law enforcemen­t has been appointed to the commission. John Bell, a former deputy police chief for the Virginia Beach Police Department who retired in 2016, was appointed by House Speaker Eileen Filler-Corn. Bell’s former employer was the primary agency involved in the response and investigat­ion of the mass shooting.

Filler-Corn also appointed Norfolk Circuit Judge Jerrauld Jones, who, like Stolle, is an elected official. Circuit Court judges are elected by the General Assembly.

The state budget that included funding for the review encouraged both law enforcemen­t and judges to sit on the board. However, it said none of the members should be “currently serving in an elected capacity ” and “every effort shall be made to ensure appointees don’t have conflicts of interest.”

The state probe will be the third review into what happened during the mass shooting at the Virginia Beach Municipal Center.

The Virginia Beach Police Department led the criminal investigat­ion and the city hired a consultant to conduct a review. That group released a report last year stating the shooter, a city engineer, had been paranoid. Complaints he had filed showed he thought he was underpaid and that his superiors expected him to perform at a higher standard than others at his pay grade. Convirs-Fowler and Del. Jason Miyares, R-Virginia Beach, pushed legislatio­n last year to create the commission to independen­tly review the tragedy after some of the victim’s families felt the first two reviews left too many unanswered questions. Shooting victims’ families have said the police will not release reports about the death of their loved ones.

Gov. Ralph Northam approved $77,000 in funding for the investigat­ion. At the conclusion of the probe, the group will consider making recommenda­tions to improve laws, polices, procedures, systems and institutio­ns to reduce the risk of mass shootings.

The commission will consist of five members appointed by the Speaker of the House of Delegates; five people appointed by the Senate Rules Committee; and 10 governor appointees. The superinten­dent of state police will be a non-voting member. The governor has not selected his appointees yet.

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