Pubdate: Sat, 03 Apr 2010 Source: Tallahassee Democrat (FL) Copyright: 2010 Tallahassee Democrat Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/hdEs6Z0o Website: http://www.tallahassee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/444 Author: Tamaryn Waters, Democrat Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ryan+Pender PENDER TO RETURN TO JOB AT TALLAHASSEE POLICE DEPT. Ryan Pender, the Tallahassee Police Department investigator fired for his role in the death of confidential informant Rachel Hoffman, will be back in uniform soon. Pender will return to TPD on April 10 as a patrol officer, not an investigator, said Officer Danny Jeter, a TPD spokesman. He'll work an afternoon shift, when manpower needs are greater, Jeter said. He will go through a "refresher" training period before he transitions into his full-time patrol job. Pender isn't banned from being an investigator again, Jeter said. "He will be allowed to apply and compete for any position that he might be qualified for, and he will be treated like any other employee in this department," Jeter said. Pender, hired Jan. 8, 2001, was Hoffman's primary police contact and the lead officer in charge of a May 7, 2008, drug-sting operation that ended in the 23-year-old's death. Hoffman was supposed to buy drugs and a gun from two men, Deneilo Bradshaw and Andrea Green, as part of the operation but was shot to death. Bradshaw and Green are serving life sentences for her murder. Pender was fired Sept. 30, 2008, after an Internal Affairs investigation said he violated department policies. Paul Villeneuve, Pender's attorney, said his client has had a difficult time since Hoffman's death. "He feels like he has been accused of being responsible for things he was not responsible for," Villeneuve said. "And ultimately, an arbitrator agreed with him." Lance Block, an attorney representing Hoffman's family, said the decision to reinstate Pender was not surprising. "You have to just shake your head about this and have faith that someday, justice for the death of Rachel Hoffman will come," Block said in a written statement. "Despite the fact that the TPD's official Internal Affairs investigation concluded that Ryan Pender and his colleagues violated almost 100 policies and procedures in causing the death of Rachel Hoffman, they are all back at work as if it never happened. The only way the TPD will ever be held accountable for its role in the wrongful death of Rachel is through the civil case." Christopher Shulman, the Tampa-based arbitrator who made the ruling, said Pender didn't need to lose his job. At most, Pender should have received a written reprimand for allowing Hoffman to be frisked by a male officer, he said. In a written statement, TPD Chief Dennis Jones said, "I respect the arbitration process, and the Tallahassee Police Department will comply fully with the arbitrator's decision." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake