Posted on 02/12/2018 12:19:34 PM PST by buckalfa
WEIRTON, W.Va. A fired Weirton police officer is getting $175,000 from the Hancock County city as part of a settlement agreement which includes other relief and brings to an end a lawsuit filed in May 2017 challenging his termination.
Timothy OBrien and the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia sued Weirton for wrongful termination, due process violations and reputation damage on behalf of former Weirton Officer Stephen Mader.
Mader claimed he was fired because he did not shoot a black man with a gun on the night of May 6, 2016 when, as a probationary officer, Mader was the first to respond to the scene of an alleged domestic disturbance.
In Maders account, he arrived to find an emotionally upset, but not aggressive or violent Ronald R.J. Williams, 23, of Pittsburgh, attempting to commit suicide by cop and pleading with Mader to shoot him, according to the lawsuit filing.
Mader, a U.S. Marine who served in Afghanistan, said he used his training to determine that, though Williams had a silver handgun which was later confirmed to be unloaded, he was only a threat to himself, no one else including Mader.
Mader did not shoot.
Officer Mader behaved in a way that, frankly, we would want all officers to behave in, said Joseph Cohen, executive director of the ACLU of West Virginia.
Williams was shot and killed when two other Weirton police officers arrived at the scene.
A State Police investigation found the shooting was justified.
Following the investigation, Mader was fired on June 7, 2016 due to his alleged failure to meet probationary standards of an officer and apparent difficulties in critical incident reasoning, the lawsuit alleged.
At one point, Weirton officials said hed been fired due to multiple prior incidents. He was publicly labeled a disgruntled employee and a bad cop.
They essentially fired him for failing to violate R.J. Williams 4th Amendment right not to get shot, said Cohen. We simply refused to believe that a police officer could lawfully be fired for failing to violate someones Constitutional rights.
The Use of Force Policy for the Weirton Police Department prohibits a Weirton police officer from using deadly force except in defense of himself/herself or others from an objectively reasonable belief of an immediate threat of death or serious bodily injury.
An immediate threat is also a requirement for the used of deadly force by an officer in the U.S. Constitution and the West Virginia Constitution.
At the end of the day, Im happy to put this chapter of my life to bed, Mader said in a Monday statement about the settlement the ACLU of West Virginia provided.
The events leading to my termination were unjustified and Im pleased a joint resolution has been met. My hope is that no other person on either end of a police call has to go through this again.
Mader, who still lives in Weirton with his family, is now working as a truck driver.
We hope that the resolution of this lawsuit will send a message to the City of Weirton and to police departments all across the State of West Virginia that our communities deserve thoughtful, compassionate and transparent law enforcement, Cohen said.
Makes you wonder why anyone would ever become a cop.
You have to make split-second decisions, and no matter what they are they are always wrong.
Shot should be shoot. Apology for having fat thumbs.
“Mader, who still lives in Weirton with his family, is now working as a truck driver.”
He can now anticipate a whole big boatload of traffic tickets and safety inspections.
As I recall it had nothing to do with a "shoot first" mentality but with a cop who wouldn't or couldn't do his job and put other people at risk of injury or death.
Made acted like a MAN. He chose a path that might have put a girl cop (not to mention other citizens)in grave danger. Can’t be showing up the girls can we. This lowest common denominator factor is why all police forces are effectively feminized. There are plenty of situations where a guy with a silver gun is going to be quickly plinked. This wasn’t one of them.
Yep. People go nuts when a cop shoots someone, but when a cop gets shot, it’s oh well, gee, that’s too bad. No other job requires split second decisions that might result in death.
Mader is a Marine veteran who saw combat in Afghanistan, but the other cop called him a coward because he didn’t shoot the man.
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