Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jan 2009
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2009 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Mike Carter, Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?233 (Law Enforcement Against
Prohibition)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

$815,000 SETTLEMENT FOR FIRED MOUNTLAKE TERRACE COP

A former Mountlake Terrace police sergeant whose views supporting the
decriminalization of marijuana led to his dismissal in 2005 has won
his job back and an $815,000 settlement from the city and Snohomish
County.

However, Sgt. Jonathan Wender will not return to the streets. In
addition to the financial settlement, the city has agreed to keep him
on administrative leave and to pay him a $90,000-a-year salary for the
next two years, when he will be able to retire after 20 years with the
department.

In addition, he won back pay dating to when he was fired and the
restoration of his retirement benefits, said his lawyer, Andrea Brenneke.

In a lawsuit, Wender, 42, had claimed the city and county violated his
right to free speech by targeting him for his political beliefs.
Wender, who holds a Ph.D., teaches full time at the University of
Washington and has written and lectured extensively about police work
and drug policy.

His law-enforcement career ended after the Snohomish County
Prosecutor's Office labeled him a dishonest cop following an
investigation into a drug case Wender handled in June 2005.

Wender had been called by a woman who believed she had seen a
marijuana plant growing at her ex-husband's house. The woman was
concerned about the couple's children, because drug use was prohibited
by the parenting plan in their divorce settlement.

According to court documents, Wender responded by telephoning the man
and telling him it was "foolish and irresponsible" to have a pot plant
growing beside the house. Wender told him to "do what he needed to do"
as soon as he hung up.

The woman, however, entered her ex-husband's house the next day and
found a small marijuana-growing operation in a crawl space. She took
photographs and gave them to narcotics detectives, who raided the home.

Wender's public and outspoken support of the decriminalization of
marijuana for small-time users and street dealers had irked Wender's
commanders over the years, according to court documents and
depositions. They became suspicious of his handling of the June 2005
case and opened an investigation.

Meanwhile, the Snohomish County Prosecutor's Office also began looking
at Wender because of the incident, even before the Police Department
finished its internal investigation.

The Prosecutor's Office ultimately labeled him a so-called "Brady
cop," a reference to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that requires
prosecutors to turn over to criminal defendants any exculpatory
evidence, including information that might call into question an
officer's honesty or integrity.

The city and county have since agreed to rescind the "Brady cop"
finding.

But in 2005, that finding was enough to get Wender fired, even though
he was never charged with a crime.

In addition to the free-speech issues, Wender's suit claimed the
Prosecutor's Office and the Police Department did not provide him an
opportunity to challenge the findings, in violation of his right to
due process.

Wender had publicly challenged and criticized the department and its
commanders over the years on a number of issues. He is affiliated with
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a Massachusetts organization of
police officers who oppose the current tactics used by police to fight
drug crimes. Among its other members are former Seattle Police Chief
Norm Stamper.

Brenneke said the settlement shows that Wender was targeted because of
his political views -- not questions about his integrity or honesty.
Depositions of several other officers showed that, while they might
have handled the June 2005 marijuana incident differently, they all
felt that Wender's response was within his discretion as a police officer.

"He was enforcing the law," Brenneke said. "The department and
prosecutors made an assumption that because of his beliefs about the
war on drugs that Sgt. Wender wasn't doing his job. That's not true."

Telephone messages left with attorneys for the city of Mountlake
Terrace and the county were not immediately returned Monday.

Wender is an admittedly unusual police officer. He holds a Ph.D. from
Simon Fraser University, where his dissertation was titled "Policing as
Poetry: Phenomenological and Aesthetic Reflections Upon the
Bureaucratic Approach to Human Predicaments." He currently teaches full
time at the UW's Sociology Department and lectures for the UW Law,
Societies, and Justice program.

He said he has received strong support from fellow officers throughout
the dispute, which he has found "overwhelming and humbling." And he
said he misses the streets and won't rule out returning to police work.

"There is a tragic beauty in working the streets, [and] I miss the
intimacy of making order out of chaos."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin