Daily Press

Ex-Charlottes­ville police chief files lawsuit against city

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE — A former police chief is suing the city she served as well as several current and former officials over her firing, saying in her $10 million lawsuit that she was terminated because of her race, color and gender.

Charlottes­ville Police Chief RaShall Brackney was fired in September. In her lawsuit, she and her lawyers allege city officials engaged in a monthslong conspiracy to have her fired, The Daily Progress of Charlottes­ville reported.

“(Brackney) was fired for being a Black woman who was trying to reform a police department,” attorney Charles Tucker Jr., who represents Brackney, said during a news conference Wednesday.

City officials declined to discuss the lawsuit. City spokesman David Dillehunt said the city does not comment on pending litigation.

The lawsuit names 10 individual­s as defendants in addition to the city. Among those named as defendants is former City Manager Chip Boyles, who fired Brackney, and former Assistant Police Chief James Mooney, who once backed out of replacing the fired chief.

In an op-ed published in The Daily Progress on Sept. 17, Boyles said he fired Brackney because he was concerned after at least 10 department leaders said they would leave because of Brackney’s leadership. Boyles said he felt he had to make a “hasty” decision to save the department.

Boyles also said he regrets the decision and wishes he had worked with Brackney and the city council more before making the decision to fire her.

Prior to the lawsuit, Brackney filed an Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission complaint against the city, Boyles and others, asking for $3 million. At a news conference in November she said she was still experienci­ng “humiliatin­g acts of discrimina­tion, continued disparate treatment, harassment and retaliatio­n.”

According to the lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia, Brackney lists 11 causes of action for the lawsuit. They include race, color and gender discrimina­tion; unlawful retaliatio­n; violation of Virginia’s whistleblo­wer statute; defamation and more.

During the news conference, Brackney said she had a message for the defendants: “You have been put on notice. As our former mayor (Nikuyah Walker) said, we have unmasked this illusion.”

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