Fired officer sues county


WRONGFUL TERMINATION CLAIMED BY DEPUTY WITH HISTORY OF CRUISER
  By Don Lehman

QUEENSBURY -- The Warren County Sheriff’s Office has fired a patrol officer for having too many on-duty car accidents, and the officer responded recently by filing a lawsuit claiming he was wrongfully terminated.
Scott Phillips was involved in eight crashes since 2009, six of them deemed “preventable” by the Sheriff’s Office.
Phillips was fired March 7 after a disciplinary hearing that ended with a hearing officer recommending he should be suspended for two months.
Sheriff Bud York opted to fire him instead, arguing that his “poor judgment” when driving a police vehicle endangered the public.
“The record is abundantly clear that Officer Phillips lacks the skills and ability to use good judgment when responding to emergency calls and non-emergency use of patrol vehicles,” York wrote in his termination notice.
That notice was filed as part of a lawsuit that Phillips filed against the county in state Supreme Court on March 22.
Phillips is seeking his job back in the lawsuit, which came after York decided the punishment recommended by hearing officer William Sprague, a former State Police major, was not severe enough.
Phillips, a patrol officer since 2008, has been involved in eight crashes with patrol cars since 2009, six of them deemed “preventable” by the department. The two that were deemed “unpreventable” involved deer.
No one was injured in any of them. The last occurred on Route 9N in Diamond Point, resulting in a patrol car being destroyed and $15,000 in damage to a homeowner’s stone wall.
That crash came less than three months after Phillips was disciplined for a spate of accidents in the preceding 30 months that resulted in damage to police vehicles. An Oct. 30, 2011, crash on Route 9 in Chester resulted in another patrol car being destroyed.
The Sheriff’s Office concluded he was traveling about 80 mph and did not try to brake before his patrol car went off Route 9N on the night of last Dec. 7. He told superior officers he swerved to avoid two deer.
Phillips told police he was trying to locate a suspected drunken driver who had been reported to dispatchers by a driver who was following the offending vehicle, and that he was in an “emergency” response. The Sheriff’s Office concluded the situation was not an emergency.
Officers have broad discretion as to when they conclude they are responding to an emergency.
In his termination letter, York wrote that it was a “very difficult decision” to fire the officer, but he had a duty to protect the public. He said he could not comment on the matter Monday.
Sprague, however, wrote that he did not feel termination was warranted, pointing to Phillips’ otherwise unblemished disciplinary record and good record of service with the department outside of the driving issues.
He pointed to a statement by sheriff’s Maj. James LaFarr that called Phillips a “good police officer.”
“In short, he is the type of candidate law enforcement agencies seek to attract and employ,” Sprague wrote.
He questioned whether Phillips has night vision problems, in light of the accidents all happening after dark.
Warren County supervisors discussed the lawsuit in executive decision Monday, but no action was taken.
Sheriff’s Sgt. Tony Breen, president of the Warren County Police Benevolent Association, the union that represents sheriff’s road patrol officers, referred comment to James Tuttle, the lawyer handling the lawsuit.
Tuttle said the union questioned why the department was choosing to fire Phillips when officers who committed more serious transgressions were not fired. Examples were cited of a sergeant who showed up for a shift after drinking alcohol and another arrested for domestic issues, both who were not fired.
“He’s the only officer only to be terminated for property damage accidents,” Tuttle said.
The lawsuit will be decided by the Appellate Division of state Supreme Court.