Drugged and drunk cop: Ludlow selectmen vote to suspend indicted police officer Thomas Foye without pay




By Patrick Johnson

LUDLOW — The Board of Selectmen on Tuesday night voted to suspended indicted police Lt. Thomas Foye without pay, effective immediately, pending the outcome of his court case on charges of the theft of drugs from a police evidence locker last year.
The vote was 5-0.
Foye had been suspended with pay since his arrest, but with a Hampden Superior Court grand jury handing down a 5-count indictment last week, the board is allowed under state law to make the suspension without pay.
Foye and his attorney, Michael Clancy of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, were present.
At the start of the meeting, Foye asked if the board would be willing to go into executive session so that he might speak in private about particulars of his case without the press and public having access. When the board opposed that, he sat silent during the discussion, asking only that he be allowed to make a brief statement afterward.
In his statement, Foye, 49, made his first public comments on the case since his arrest, and gave a hint at the particular circumstances that led to his arrest and suspension and cost him his reputation and what had been a distinguished career in law enforcement.
He thanked the board for their time and consideration and said he would have his day in court to explain himself.
"I love this town and spent a lot of good years with a lot of good, dedicated service," he said. "I went into surgery a hero and came out a drug addict, and I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy."
He apologized to the selectmen for placing them in this position.
"I love this town and respect all of you," he said. Then he said he would work to reclaim his reputation.
"I'm not done with this. I'm going to help someone. Someday you'll be proud to say you know me again, and proud that I'm from this town," he said.
When he finished, he left the room and headed for the elevator. Clancy said he would have no further comment.
Selectmen chair William E. Rooney said the Foye fallout since August has been the toughest issue in his six years on the board. "You're my friend, my former neighbor. I know your family very well. I'm not enjoying this," he said.
But the charges against Foye are very serious, and the selectmen have a responsibility to act in the town's best interests, he said.
Foye was charged with tampering with evidence, theft of drugs from a dispensary and possession of a class B substance, cocaine, according to the office of Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley.
He is scheduled to be arraigned in Hampden Superior Court at a later date.
Foye, a 25-year police veteran, was arrested Aug. 15 at the Ludlow police station by members of the Massachusetts State Police assigned to the office of Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni.
His arrest was the result of an internal investigation within the department after some drug evidence was found to be missing. Ludlow police contacted the Hampden district attorney, and the DA referred the case to the state Attorney General’s Office.
Foye was arrested after he entered the evidence locker without authorization. At the time he was found to be in possession of cocaine, officials said. The investigation determined that Foye had entered the locker multiple times using a key that allowed him entry without leaving any record of it in his name. They also found empty evidence bags in his office.
Foye denied the charges at his arraignment in Palmer District Court following his arrest. He was released without bail on the condition that he surrender all firearms to the police and that he remain drug free and submit to random drug testing.
According to court documents, a video feed captured Foye entering the locked narcotics locker at the Ludlow Police Station, where he appears to manipulate and open evidence bags.
Prosecutors charge that between January and August of last year, he removed dozens of pieces of evidence including cocaine and prescription pills. They also charge that he replaced narcotics evidence in evidence bags with pills that did not match the description on the corresponding state lab paperwork.
Prior to his arrest, Foye’s career was described as exemplary. He had been promoted to the rank of provisional lieutenant by the Ludlow Board of Selectmen just three months prior to his arrest.
His salary in 2012 according to town records was $104,629, including $20,987 in overtime.
Foye, a former School Committee member, worked for nine years in the Detective Bureau. In the 1990s, he served on an anti-gang unit.

Two years ago, Foye participated in a forum at Ludlow High School where he warned parents and residents about the growing danger of prescription drug abuse. He said the problem in Ludlow is the worst he has seen it in the 25 years he has been working for the Police Department.