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  • Ex-cop's future on force in doubt

    Albany Times Union, NY
    June 1 2004

    Ex-cop's future on force in doubt
    Legal action threatened by 2 detectives if Cmdr. Christian
    D'Alessandro is rehired by the city

    By BRENDAN LYONS, Staff writer
    First published: Tuesday, June 1, 2004

    ALBANY -- Two members of the Albany police force have threatened
    legal action against the city if former Cmdr. Christian D'Alessandro,
    whose firing earlier this year ignited widespread controversy, is
    rehired by the department.

    John W. Bailey, an attorney for Cmdr. Ralph Tashjian and Detective
    Susan Miller, contends at least four minority officers accused
    D'Alessandro of racism when he was commander of detectives. Bailey
    wrote a letter to Chief James Turley last week in which he warned
    that "should the Police Department make the mistake of re-employing
    Mr. D'Alessandro, my clients intend to fully explore and exercise
    all of their legal options."

    Tashjian is of Armenian descent; Miller is black.

    In an interview, Bailey said the letter was prompted by recent rumors
    that city officials may consider reinstating D'Alessandro. He was
    fired in February for allegedly lying to internal affairs detectives
    about an anonymous derogatory flier that targeted Tashjian, who now
    heads the detective division.

    Bailey said he also represents Victor Arocho, a former city detective
    who works for the FBI.

    "I represent three people who are legitimately concerned
    about the prospect of Mr. D'Alessandro being re-employed by the
    Police Department," Bailey said. "In their view, he treated them
    inappropriately while supervising them while in the department,
    and they believe it is related to their race or their ethnicity."

    D'Alessandro could not be reached for comment Monday.

    On Feb. 4, two days before D'Alessandro was fired by former Chief
    Robert Wolfgang, Detective Kenneth Wilcox, who is black, filed a notice
    of claim against the city that targeted D'Alessandro. In the claim,
    Wilcox said he "has been harassed, defamed, falsely accused, berated,
    discriminated against and generally been subjected to a hostile work
    environment due to his ethnicity."

    In an interview that week, Wilcox claimed D'Alessandro had been
    "discriminating against black officers since 1995."

    But within many of the city's minority neighborhoods, D'Alessandro
    has won accolades from residents for his community-policing efforts.
    Dozens of residents have jammed city meetings demanding he be
    reinstated and charging that his critics were disgruntled officers
    who were unhappy when D'Alessandro targeted their work ethic.

    The charges of racism against the former commander began to surface
    more than two years ago at a time when D'Alessandro was critiquing and
    auditing the work ethic and standards of detectives under his command.

    D'Alessandro's standing in the department, and his relationship with
    Wilcox, began to waver that year after he issued a report analyzing
    the arrest production of detectives who made more than $80,000 in 2001.

    Wilcox made more than $95,000 that year. But D'Alessandro's report
    said Wilcox made just four arrests in connection with the $25,000 in
    overtime he was paid; in contrast, the report said, another officer
    who earned $16,000 in overtime made 127 arrests. Wilcox has denied
    the report was behind his lawsuit.

    Other memorandums filed in early 2002 by D'Alessandro outlined serious
    allegations of forgery, fraud and misconduct by detectives. He was
    reassigned to patrol duties shortly after writing the memorandums.

    "The memo and the timing of my transfer speaks for itself,"
    D'Alessandro said previously, declining further comment.

    His supporters, including many community activists, have pointed out
    that D'Alessandro has been a longtime Big Brother to a black child
    from Delmar and he regularly attends Bible study classes at a Baptist
    church in Arbor Hill.

    His firing continues to hang over the department. But police sources
    said the retirements of Wolfgang and former Public Safety Commissioner
    John C. Nielsen, and the promotions of three commanders to newly
    created assistant chief jobs, appeared to open a new era for the
    department after a year of turmoil.

    Turley, who was promoted to chief on May 3, allegedly expressed his
    uneasiness with D'Alessandro's reassignment from the detective unit
    two years ago, according to department sources. But whether that will
    be a factor in D'Alessandro being offered his job back is unclear.

    Police and city officials could not be reached for comment on Monday.
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