Chief fires police officer accused of harassment
CHATTANOOGA (WDEF) Chattanooga Police Chief Fred Fletcher has fired one of his officers.
David Campbell was found in violation of the Code of Conduct for Harassment and Improper Arrest from an incident last May.
After a disciplinary hearing on Thursday, the chief fired the six year veteran.
Chief Fletcher is not commenting on his decision while Campbell appeals it.
Hanson Melvin filed a complaint against Officer Campbell after his arrest on May 29th, in which he was arrested for disorderly conduct outside the Northgate Crossing Apartments.
Here is Melvin’s version of what happened:
AFFIDAVIT OF HANSON C. MELVIN via Nooganomics.com
I, Hanson Melvin, of 1664 Greendale Way Apartment 414, Chattanooga, Tenn., do hereby affirm and swear that the following account of my arrest is true and accurate.
This is a record of an incident that occurred May 29, 2016, Northgate Crossing Apartments.
A friend, Coheleach “Cool Aid” Holmes, and I were leaving my apartment a few minutes after midnight to a nearby convenience store for milk.
As we entered the parking lot we saw a large group of people and several police cars, several of which had on flashing blue lights. I was very reluctant to continue toward my friend’s car because it meant passing a large group of police and onlookers. But we said to each other that we were not involved in the incident — whatever it was — and we didn’t have to worry about police.
I said, “I’m straight, you’re straight, we ain’t doing nothing. Let’s keep going.” We weren’t going to cower inside until the cops left.
We walked along in front of the buildings, which were to our left, the scene with the police on the right. At the fire hydrant four buildings from mine, we were about to cross the thoroughfare toward my friend’s parked car. We were held up by police officers.
Chattanooga police officer David Campbell with a smile on his face, asked me jokingly, “Do you have your driver’s license yet?”
He knew of my personal history, in which I had had a revoked license.
As a pedestrian, I responded calmly, “It’s not your business.”
Coheleach and I crossed the thoroughfare toward his car.
Officer Campbell drew close, demanded that I show ID.
I searched my pockets and I didn’t have any ID on me. He demanded next that I tell him my social security number. By this time we were near my friend’s car. Officer Campbell, before I could answer, thrust his hand toward me and squeezed the back of my neck. He thrust me against the roof of the car. I had my fist around my set of keys so I wouldn’t drop them, but he demanded in a hoarse whisper in my left ear, “You better unball your m——f—–g hands.”
I asked Officer Campbell, “Why are you doing this to me, man?”
A second officer approached and frisked me, patting me down to my ankles, even though I wore shorts.
My friend said, “He didn’t do nothing, Why you doing this to him?”
I said, “I am a citizen of the United States of America. I’ve got three kids, and I’ve got a wife. People know me out here. People are seeing what you were doing to me.” This comment had no effect. I have a daughter, 3, and a son, 1½. My wife, Tarah, is pregnant with our third child.
I pleaded with Officer Campbell, “Please don’t take me to jail. I have a lot going on right now.”
To suggest how violently I was thrown about, I make note of the damage to my house shoes which I was wearing at the time but which fell off. I was taken to jail as barefoot as an animal.
As they were taking me away, I pleaded, “Please don’t take me to jail, please.”
The officer did not give me the reason for my arrest or state probable cause for my arrest. He did not state the charges against me as he was taking me toward his cruiser. Mr. Campbell told me as he was driving me toward the county jail downtown that the charges were “disorderly conduct.” All statements I had made at the scene were in a conversational tone and volume, and I spoke to none of the onlookers to provoke any riot, uproar or confusion.
I have a bank a account with less than $100 in it, don’t have Investments and savings. Yet, I was able to come up with $62 to pay the bondsman, Key Bonding, to pay my $500 bond to get out. The money initially came from Coheleach, whom I repaid that day.
But my ordeal with police was not over.
My friend fetched from the jail and took me to my apartment complex. We sat in his car and talked about my dilemma for 10 minutes.
Five police cruisers pulled up behind us. An officer asked us to get out of the car by bellowing at us from his loud speaker. Coheleach and I stepped out of his car.
“I just got out of jail, man,” I said despairingly to the nearest officer.
“I know,” he said.
So I asked, “Why are you harassing me again?”
He said, “We got a call of someone with a crowbar out here walking around.”
He said, “You all look suspicious.”
They shoved us against a car and frisked us.
The officers directed me to sit on one cop car hood while Coheleach was forced to sit on a different one.
Then I was approached by an officer who was a childhood friend. His name is Officer Jeff Rahn.
“What’s up, man?”
“Brother, you see what’s going on? That man has been harassing me. I didn’t do nothing. He’s harassing me now.” I went on to say: “Why didn’t you stand up for me I would never have let him do that to you?”
My childhood friend the officer said, “I don’t get involved in other officers’ business.”
“If it was me, you wouldn’t have gone to jail. I would never have let that happen to you,” I told Officer Rahn.
“You got smart with him, man,” he warned me.
The officer came up behind me with what seems to be a smirk on his face. I asked him, “Are you done harassing me now, man? May I go into my house now?” I went to my house.
My court date is June 14.
Further affiant saith not. I swear the above and foregoing representations are true and correct to the best of my information, knowledge and belief.
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