Fraternal Order of Police calls
for Fairfax County police chief’s resignation
Dick Uliano
The Fairfax County, Virginia,
Fraternal Order of Police is calling for the resignation of police Chief Ed
Roessler over his handling of an incident involving a white police officer who
is accused of using a stun gun last month on a Black man who appeared
disoriented and noncombative.
“As the President of the Fairfax
Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 77 myself, my membership and officers of your
department no longer have confidence in your ability to be the Chief of the
Fairfax County Police Department and ask you respectively to resign your
position immediately,” Brad Carruthers, president of the Fairfax Fraternal
Order of Police, Lodge 77, writes in a letter to the Roessler.
Officer Tyler Timberlake is
facing three counts of assault and battery for stunning the man, who was
rambling and pacing in the street on June 5. Timberlake and other officers on
the scene were relieved of duty pending the investigation.
Prosecutors were granted
permission Monday to drop misdemeanor charges and instead seek to secure an
indictment against Timberlake, who used a stun gun on the man he mistakenly
thought he recognized.
Immediately after using his stun
gun, Timberlake is heard repeatedly addressing the man as “Anthony.” But the
person Timberlake was on top of was not named Anthony.
The man was treated at a hospital
and released.
In a statement to the community a
few days after the incident, Roessler accused Timberlake of violating the
department’s use-of-force policies.
The FOP, in its letter to
Roessler, the board of supervisors, the county executive and deputy county
executive of public safety, accused Roessler of failing to be “a fair and
impartial leader.”
The group’s letter said Roessler
“crossed the line from Chief of Police to that of a politician playing dress
up.”
The letter charges that
Roessler’s public statements “effectively ended the career and impugned the
reputation of a Fairfax County Police Officer.”
The group said a survey of its
members found that 99% said Roessler’s actions have worsened morale, and 98%
support a formal request for Roessler to resign immediately.
In a statement issued by the
Fairfax County Police Department Public Affairs Bureau, chief spokesman Anthony
Guglielmi said, “Chief Roessler is focused and committed to leading the
department.”
Guglielmi also said that “public
integrity, transparency and ethical leadership will always be at the core of
everything we do here.”
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