Probe faults mayor, officials for keeping Prude death secret

An investigation into the official response to Daniel Prude’s police suffocation death last year in Rochester, New York, is faulting the city’s mayor and former police chief for keeping critical details of the case secret for months and lying to the public about what they knew.
The report, commissioned by
Rochester’s city council and made public Friday, said Mayor Lovely Warren lied
at a September press conference when she said it wasn’t until August that she
learned officers had physically restrained Prude during the March 23, 2020,
arrest that led to his death.
Warren was told that very day that
officers had used physical restraint, the report said, and by mid-April she,
then-Police Chief La’Ron Singletary and other officials were aware Prude had
died as a result and the officers were under criminal investigation.
“In the final analysis, the decision not to
publicly disclose these facts rested with Mayor Warren, as the elected mayor of
the city of Rochester,” said the report, written by New York City-based lawyer
Andrew G. Celli Jr. “But Mayor Warren alone is not responsible for the
suppression of the circumstances of the Prude arrest and Mr. Prude’s death.”
Warren said in a statement that
she welcomed the report “because it allows our community to move forward.”
“Throughout city government, we have
acknowledged our responsibility, recognized that changes are necessary and
taken action,” she said, citing various measures on police practices and
discipline.
In her statement, Warren didn’t
address the report’s specific assessments of her own conduct.
A special counsel to the city
administration disputed claims that Warren had lied.
The mayor spoke based on the facts
known to her at the time and if what she said wasn’t true it was because
Singletary had misled her, Carrie Cohen said.
The report said Singletary told
the mayor the officers restrained Prude, but the chief “consistently
deemphasized” the role of restraints in Prude’s death, and his statements to
officials didn’t “capture the disturbing tenor of the entire encounter.”
Singletary’s characterization
“likely impacted” how city officials viewed the matter, the report said.
A lawyer for Singletary said,
under a first review of the report, Singletary “was truthful in his statements”
to Warren and other city officials.
“He never participated in any cover-up nor did
he intentionally downplay the circumstances” around Prude’s death, Michael
Tallon said in a statement.
“When asked by the mayor to lie, he declined and
he announced his retirement the next day,” he added.
Warren told the public Singletary
initially told her Prude’s death was a “drug overdose,” but Friday’s report
said he never told her that. Singletary, meanwhile, made “untrue statements by
omission” when he failed to correct Warren’s claim during a September news
conference that she was not informed Prude’s death had been ruled a homicide,
the report said. It said Singletary told her of the finding on April 13.
Additionally, the report said, a
city lawyer in August discouraged Warren from publicly disclosing Prude’s
arrest or commencing disciplinary action against the officers after she viewed
body camera video of the encounter for the first time.
The lawyer incorrectly stated that
the city was barred from taking action against the officers while the state
attorney general’s office was investigating Prude’s death, the report said.
“There are no surprises in there. It confirms
most of what I already knew,” said attorney Elliot Shields, who represents
Prude’s brother, Joe.
“What it shows me on a larger scale is the
systemic failures of the city,” he said.
The body camera video, made public
by Prude’s family in early September, shows Prude handcuffed and naked with a
spit hood over his head as an officer pushes his face against the ground, while
another officer presses a knee to his back. The officers held him down for
about two minutes until he stopped breathing. He was taken off life support a
week later.
A grand jury last month declined
to indict the officers involved.
Lawyers for the seven police
officers suspended over Prude’s death have said the officers were strictly
following their training that night, employing a restraining technique known as
“segmenting.” They claimed Prude’s use of PCP, which caused irrational
behavior, was “the root cause” of his death.
Rochester’s city council
authorized the independent investigation into the handling of Prude’s death
within days of the video being made public and voted to give investigators the
power to subpoena city departments.
Celli, in the report, noted that
the decision to inform the public of a significant event “is a policy judgment,
and a political one, not a legal one,” and that there are no written rules or
standards in Rochester governing the mayor or other officials in such matters.
“It is not for the special council investigator
to pass judgment on whether the decisions by Rochester officials not to
disclose the arrest and death of Daniel Prude were right or wrong,” Celli
wrote. “The judges of that question are the citizens of the city of Rochester
and the public at large.”
The report also confirms that
Rochester police commanders urged city officials to hold off on publicly
releasing the body camera footage of Prude’s suffocation death because they
feared violent blowback if it came out during protests over the May 25 police
killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
In a June 4 email, Deputy Chief
Mark Simmons cited the “current climate” in the city and the nation and advised
Singletary to press the city’s lawyers to deny a Prude family lawyer’s public
records request for the footage of the encounter that led to his death.
“We certainly do not want people to misinterpret
the officers’ actions and conflate this incident with any recent killings of
unarmed Black men by law enforcement nationally,” Simmons wrote. “That would
simply be a false narrative, and could create animosity and potentially violent
blow back in this community as a result.”
“Totally agree,” Singletary replied, according
to the emails.
Rochester officials released the
emails last fall, along with police reports and other documents. Warren fired
Singletary and suspended the city lawyer, Corporation Counsel Tim Curtin, and
communications director Justin Roj without pay for 30 days in response to
fallout over the case.
Prude’s death sparked several
weeks of nightly protests and calls for Warren’s resignation. His family has
filed a federal lawsuit alleging the police department sought to cover up the
true nature of Prude’s death.