The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Public works employees dodge discipline for photos

- By Lisa Backus

STONINGTON — Four town Public Works employees who were caught on video staging photos of syringes at a local park in April will not be charged or discipline­d, officials said.

“They acknowledg­ed they used poor judgment,” First Selectwoma­n Danielle Chesebroug­h said. “They admitted they made a mistake. There is nothing in a union environmen­t you can do for poor judgment.”

Stonington police launched an investigat­ion after the photos were sent to local resident Chris Donahue, who posted them on Facebook to draw attention to what he felt was potential illegal drug activity at the park named after his father, a long-time firefighte­r. The photos were taken at Donahue Park on the anniversar­y of his father’s death, Chesebroug­h said.

The Public Works employees did not provide an explanatio­n to police why they staged the photos aside from complainin­g about having to collect syringes in the area of the park and not having confidence the drug activity would be investigat­ed.

In an interview with police, Donahue said he

regretted posting the photos online and “wishes now that he handled it differentl­y and just called (police) to address the issue,” according to the investigat­ion report.

The Facebook post prompted Police Chief Jay DelGrosso to initiate an investigat­ion and request additional park patrols, which turned up little criminal activity, the report stated.

Town video surveillan­ce cameras showed the four Public Works employees arriving at the park gazebo around 11 a.m. on April 27. One of the employees can be seen motioning to the others that they are on camera. There is no sound, but a second employee is then seen taking several syringes out of a clear container and

placing them on the gazebo floor to be photograph­ed.

The video then shows the employees scooping up and placing the syringes back in the container. Police were not able to determine who took the syringes or where they wound up after the men photograph­ed the items, the investigat­ion report said.

“The actions of these public works employees also interfered with our ability to send the syringes to the state lab to test for heroin,” Lt. Michael Peckham wrote in the report.

The four employees admitted they found the syringes at various locations near the park, including a dumpster at a restaurant, the report said. But workers also said they did not find the syringes at the gazebo, which is what the photos implied. The report provides no explanatio­n why the workers collected the syringes and placed them in the gazebo to be photograph­ed.

The police report indicated officers were immediatel­y suspicious of the photos since some included syringes that appeared to be filled with liquid, which likely would not have been discarded by a person who is addicted to opioids.

The employees told officers there is no Public Works protocol for dealing with syringes and “the feeling among most of the town workers was that if they called police to report the needles that nothing would be done about addressing the issue.”

In the report, Peckman contended the conduct of the town employees should be reviewed since the person who sent the photos to Donahue “created undue annoyance and alarm to (the) community and created undue mistrust.”

But Chesebroug­h said town officials decided to not punish the employees after speaking with them and the director of Public Works.

“They made a poor emotional decision,” Chesebroug­h said.

 ?? Stonington Police Department ?? Four Stonington Public Works employees will not be discipline­d after an investigat­ion showed they staged photos of syringes in a local park.
Stonington Police Department Four Stonington Public Works employees will not be discipline­d after an investigat­ion showed they staged photos of syringes in a local park.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States