In this
photo taken Monday, July 6, 2009,
Mayor
Dave Bing announced the appointment of
former Wayne County Sherriff, Warren Evans as Detroit's new
top cop. The 40 year law enforcement veteran came
from a legacy of public service. (Photo by HB
Meeks/Tell Us Detroit)
Detroit
mayor
says
ousted
chief
`blindsided'
him
By DAVID
N.
GOODMAN
Associated
Press
Writer
Detroit's
mayor
said
Thursday
that he
fired
the
city's
police
chief
after he
was
"blindsided"
by his
role in
two
reality
television
shows
and his
romantic
relationship
with a
fellow
police
officer.
Mayor
Dave
Bing's
comments
came a
day
after he
fired
Chief
Warren
Evans —
one year
after he
was
hired
for the
job.
On his
Facebook
page,
Evans,
61,
lashed
out at
critics,
saying
he
didn't
understand
the
problem
with a
video
promoting
a
reality
show in
which he
would
star.
"I don't
get the
big
fuss!
It's a
producers
product,"
he said
in the
Facebook
post.
"If the
City
doesn't
like it
there
won't be
a series
Period!
Does
someone
want to
believe
the
streets
aren't
like
that?
LOL"
Bing
acknowledged
for the
first
time
Thursday
that the
promotional
video
was a
factor
in his
decision
to fire
Evans.
The
video
for a
proposed
reality
show
called
"The
Chief"
includes
footage
of Evans
posing
with an
assault
rifle
outside
a vacant
city
train
station,
patrolling
and
making
arrests.
Bing had
banned
reality
TV
cameras
from
following
officers
after a
7-year-old
girl was
killed
during a
police
raid in
May,
though
the
promotional
video
appears
to have
been
shot
over the
winter.
In the
botched
May
raid, a
special
response
team was
searching
for a
man
wanted
in an
earlier
killing.
It was
documented
by a
camera
crew for
A&E's
reality
television
show
"The
First
48."
Bing
didn't
know
Evans
had
approved
a
contract
with the
show,
which
had
followed
Detroit
police
and
homicide
investigators
for
several
months.
Bing,
who
initially
declined
to
elaborate
on his
reasons
for
firing
the
chief on
Wednesday,
said
Thursday
that
along
with the
promotional
video
and "The
First
48"
contract,
Evans'
relationship
with Lt.
Monique
Patterson
also led
him to
fire the
chief.
Evans
has been
public
about
their
relationship,
and
police
have no
policy
against
officers
dating
each
other.
"We know
the
tease,
the A&E,
there
were
personnel
issues,
all of
that,"
Bing
said
during
an
impromptu
news
conference.
"It
wasn't
easy. It
was my
choice.
I don't
just get
rid of
people,"
Bing
said. "I
was
upset,
No. 1,
because
of being
blindsided
by it."
The
Associated
Press
left
messages
for
Evans
seeking
comment.
On his
Facebook
page, he
also
addressed
his
relationship
with
Patterson,
who
appears
with
Evans in
the
profile
photo of
his
page.
"It's a
shame
when its
problematic
for two
single
adults
to
date,"
Evans
said in
a
Facebook
posting.
"Shame
on me
for not
hiding
it! Or
being
married
with a
girlfriend
on the
job like
so many
others."
Among
the
grounds
Bing
cited
for
firing
Evans,
the
relationship
with
Patterson
presents
the most
serious
concerns,
said
University
of
Michigan
ethicist
John R.
Chamberlin.
When the
chief
dates a
lieutenant,
"anyone
between
them in
the
chain of
command
is
implicated,"
said
Chamberlin,
a
professor
of
public
policy
and
director
of the
Center
for
Ethics
in
Public
Life.
Evans
should
have
talked
with
Bing
about
the
issue
and
tried to
work out
a
solution,
such as
transferring
Patterson
to
duties
outside
the
police
command
structure,
Chamberlin
said.
The last
thing
the
chief
should
have
done was
to set
up
Detroit
for more
bad
publicity,
Chamberlin
said.
"We
don't
need one
more
thing
that's
going to
be on
the
front
page,"
he said.
Jack
Rinchich,
president
of the
National
Association
of
Chiefs
of
Police,
had a
different
view,
saying
an
officer
shouldn't
be
faulted
for a
personal
matter
that
isn't
covered
by
department
policy.
"If you
don't
have any
rules,
how do
you know
you're
stepping
out of
line?"
asked
Rinchich,
safety
director
at the
University
of
Charleston
in West
Virginia.