The Day

Blacker’s claim of vindictive prosecutio­n dismissed

- This is the opinion of David Collins. d.collins@theday.com

It’s been four years that criminal charges have been pending against Kevin Blacker for painting two small defunct street signs in New London pink.

Blacker, who sometime ago broke a longstandi­ng stall in the prosecutio­n with a motion for a speedy trial, was back in court Friday with an interestin­g legal argument that he has been vindictive­ly prosecuted.

But Judge Jassette A. Henry, a Gov. Ned Lamont judicial nominee, rejecting Blacker’s argument that the prosecutio­n was vindictive­ly pursued because of his activism and complaints about the closure of State Pier to traditiona­l shipping, denied his motion to dismiss.

I’d say Blacker, whose tips about wrongdoing at the Connecticu­t Port Authority preceded wide-ranging federal criminal investigat­ions, certainly deserves the moniker of whistleblo­wer.

Blacker, who was representi­ng himself Friday, made reference to what seems, from my little reading on the topic, a powerful legal premise that the prosecutio­n has a heavy burden to disprove when there is even an appearance of vindictive­ness in a criminal proceeding.

To be fair, I’m not sure that Judge Henry knows the whole story based on the little Blacker was able to explain in court Friday.

But I would say vindictive­ness, at least in layman’s terms, is the best way to characteri­ze Blacker’s prosecutio­n as the charges against him still linger after four years.

Blacker, who has long offered to pay for the signs, admitted the crime at the outset, even announcing it publicly.

It was David Kooris, chairman of the port authority, who admitted reporting it after Blacker’s confession, submitting an estimate to State Police for the signs in excess of the threshold that made the damage a felony.

The problem is that Kooris had no business estimating for police the cost of repairing the signs, which direct people to the pier area but are on public property and owned by the state. Kooris said he had port authority pier contractor­s estimate the cost of the signs. What do port contractor­s know about state sign costs?

The investigat­ion and arrest were carried out by the elite Eastern Connecticu­t Major Crime Squad, which you would think would know to get an estimate of the damage from the owners of the signs, not someone politicall­y connected but not really involved who Blacker had been publicly criticizin­g for years.

It turns out the damage to the signs when the Department of Transporta­tion, which controls them, did

an estimate was less than $600, making the charge a misdemeano­r. Prosecutor­s finally acknowledg­ed that and reduced the charge to a misdemeano­r, long after Blacker’s widely publicized arrest on the erroneous felony charge.

There’s no way I can imagine the major crime squad, usually tasked with things like murder and armed robbery, would have investigat­ed sign vandalism unless they were assigned to do so at the highest levels of state government.

So you had a whistleblo­wer, who has been making public complaints about ethical lapses at the port authority, pursued by the elite squad of the State Police and arrested on an unreasonab­le felony charge based on an erroneous complaint by someone whose agency was the target of the complaints.

Sure sounds vindictive to me.

“Some people in society are given incredible powers, and when they abuse those powers someone has to be willing to do something about it,” Blacker said in court Friday.

“The way in which I have been prosecuted is vindictive in nature … because of my activism and the exercise of my rights.”

Maybe we will learn more in July, when Judge Henry ordered the trial to begin, first with jury selection.

Blacker asked in court how to subpoena witnesses.

Stay tuned.

 ?? d.collins@theday.com ?? DAVID COLLINS
d.collins@theday.com DAVID COLLINS

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