Pubdate: Tue, 11 Jun 2002 Source: Meriden Record-Journal, The (CT) Copyright: 2002, The Record-Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.record-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/555 UNACCEPTABLE MESSAGE The arbitration panel which overturned the suspension given Southington Police Sergeant William T. Perry sends an unacceptable message to citizens of Southington, to its police department and to all those who have labored in the war on drugs. No one has any desire to drag the Perry family across any more hot coals; surely, there is suffering in this man's life. But in February, on the basis of both an internal investigation and a state police report, the Southington Board of Police Commissioners handed Sergeant Perry a 30 day suspension without pay for the violations of department policies, including apparently an admission that he knew about his wife's use of marijuana and his minimal intervention with her behavior. There was, of course, a conflict for Perry: as an officer, he is always on duty, a duty which includes taking action when he sees the law being broken. As a husband, he is also "on duty" and any person can see a difference between turning in a stranger for a drug problem and turning in a spouse for such a problem. It's a hard choice and neither solution is positive. Perry apparently did what many people would do: he tried to help her get help. But being a police officer has its consequences in such a case. The Board of Police Commissioners, one would surmise, realized Perry's position in reaching its decision in his case: the 30 day suspension was divided into two, with half being held in abeyance should some other disciplinary problem arise within two years. The remaining 15 days, Perry was to be permitted to take in three-day chunks over five months. Certainly, such a consequence for misconduct was real, but compares very favorably with losing one's job or being demoted or some other action. Now, however, the state Board of Mediation and Arbitration, acting on an appeal filed by Local 333 of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, has ruled that Perry doesn't have to serve his suspension, should receive his salary in full and that the incident should be taken off his record. In other words, nothing at all happened. The message this sends is flat out wrong. We would not hold Perry responsible for his wife's actions. If she used marijuana, it is she, not he, who must pay the criminal penalty. Yet the Southington Police Department, like that in every other town, is deeply involved in the national effort to discourage the use of illegal drugs. Whatever anyone believes about marijuana, the fact is that it remains an illegal drug in this state and that its use is against the law. Since, in fact, the sergeant admitted to police investigators that he was aware of his wife's problem, it is just plain silly for the arbitration panel to pretend, on the basis of a husband's privilege of electing not to testify against his wife, that the admission just didn't happen. The ruling mocks all the official rhetoric which tries to spell out the consequences for the use of drugs. If this is the police union's notion of self-protection, they cannot tell the difference between that and self-mockery. The decision mocks the work of the Board of Police Commissioners and the duty of Southington police officers. And it mocks the citizens of Southington who are asked to take law enforcement seriously. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom