{"id":54380,"date":"2022-01-17T16:45:00","date_gmt":"2022-01-18T00:45:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/shoreline-senators-bill-would-close-loophole-on-police-disciplinary-actions\/"},"modified":"2022-01-18T17:30:56","modified_gmt":"2022-01-19T01:30:56","slug":"shoreline-senators-bill-would-close-loophole-on-police-disciplinary-actions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/shoreline-senators-bill-would-close-loophole-on-police-disciplinary-actions\/","title":{"rendered":"Shoreline senator’s bill would close loophole on police disciplinary actions"},"content":{"rendered":"
Legislation introduced early this session by Sen. Jesse Salomon, D-Shoreline, would restrict avenues used by police who have been disciplined by their superiors to overturn or reduce those disciplinary actions and gain reinstatement despite serious misconduct.<\/p>\n
According to a Jan. 17 Washington state Senate Democrats news release, a glaring example of the existing gap in accountability has been playing out for more than a year in Kent, where the city has been unable to resolve the case of an assistant police chief accused of multiple acts of on-duty displays of pro-Nazi insignia.<\/p>\n
Kent Assistant Police Chief Derek Kammerzell had initially been issued a two-week suspension—and allowed to draw paid vacation during that time—after posting Nazi rank insignia outside his office door, joking about the Holocaust, and engaging in other misconduct in September of 2020.<\/p>\n
In response to subsequent public criticism, Kent Police Chief Rafael Padilla and Kent Mayor Dana Ralph posted a video Jan. 7 in which they sought to explain the city’s handling of the case. Though Padilla said Kammerzell had been “untruthful” with investigators, which would constitute grounds for firing, Padilla indicated that he chose not to fire him because of the risk that the firing would be overturned in arbitration.<\/p>\n
A recent editorial in the Seattle Times has called for Kammerzell’s resignation. Mayor Ralph has asked the Kent Police Officers Association for his resignation, but the union or Kammerzell has not issued a response.<\/p>\n
Salomon, meanwhile, is proposing a remedy, according to the news release.<\/p>\n