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Hartford Police Sergeant Demoted, Could Lose Job After 'Trigger Happy' Remarks

Hartford Police Chief David Rosado talks about the department's response to the Stephen Barone controversy during a press conference Thursday at police headquarters.
Vanessa de la Torre
/
Connecticut Public Radio
Hartford Police Chief David Rosado talks about the department's response to the Stephen Barone controversy during a press conference Thursday at police headquarters.

A white Hartford police sergeant who was caught on a citizen’s video saying he was “trigger happy” has been demoted and is fighting for his job, city officials said Thursday. 

Along with his demotion from sergeant, Officer Stephen Barone faces internal affairs charges that he violated the Hartford Police Department’s Code of Conduct, in part for his controversial remarks that stirred outrage in the community this summer.

Chief David Rosado said the department has embarked on a disciplinary process that could include suspending Barone without pay — or firing him. Barone is appealing and will have a hearing that could happen as soon as next week, according to the city.

In the meantime, Barone has been reassigned to desk duty. A city spokesperson said Barone’s base salary drops from $89,200 as a sergeant down to $76,841.

“It’s important that we acknowledge that we can do better,” Rosado said during a press conference at police headquarters Thursday. “I take responsibility for that. It is my responsibility to make sure that we get better with our training, with our community interactions. And it’s important that we heal as a community.”

The city on Thursday released two administrative reports on Barone, including one detailing a July traffic stop that led to a police chase in which the fleeing motorist ended up on I-91, driving the wrong way. Barone, then a sergeant and supervisor of the department’s Community Response Unit, was the ranking officer in that incident.

The other internal affairs report focused on the night of August 9.

“If anybody wants to fight or run, I’m a little trigger happy, guys,” Barone is heard telling a group of men suspected of trespassing on Heath Street. The video of this exchange ended up on Facebook.

“I’m not gonna lie,” Barone said in the recording, which Hartford police used as evidence in its investigation. “I get paid a ton of money in overtime if I have to shoot somebody. So don’t do anything stupid. All right?”

Hartford police headquarters on High Street.
Vanessa de la Torre
/
Connecticut Public Radio
Hartford police headquarters on High Street.

On Thursday, the city posted an extended video of the encounter that investigators obtained during their probe. City officials said community leaders, including local pastors, got an early look.

“This is about the relationship of trust and partnership between our police department and our community,” Bronin said at the press conference. “It is critical that we not only respond appropriately to this incident, but that we … work to build stronger training procedures, stronger policies, and constant engagement to try to do everything we possibly can to make sure no officer thinks it’s OK to use language like this to interact in our community.”

In the newly released portions of the video, Barone tells the men on Heath Street that his “trigger happy” comments were a mind game so they would cooperate. The city also confirmed it was Barone’s voice saying it would be a bad financial decision if he were to shoot someone on the job, because the ensuing investigation would hamper his overtime.

“I’m going to make double my base salary this year,” Barone said in the recording. “I would lose $70,000 if I shot somebody. … That means I’ve got to sell my cars, move from my nice house, because that’s 70 grand less that I’ve gotta make every year.”

Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin addresses the media Thursday after the city released internal affairs reports on Stephen Barone.
Vanessa de la Torre
/
Connecticut Public Radio
Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin addresses the media Thursday after the city released internal affairs reports on Stephen Barone.

During the video, some of the men on Heath Street tell Barone that his “trigger happy” remarks were “spooky” and unnerving. They brought up the specter of police officers shooting people of color — what Rosado later referred to as “a national narrative going on with law enforcement.”

“Community members, no matter what community they’re in, they understand that things go awry at times,” Rosado said.

Barone, who is white, told the men in the video that he hasn’t shot anyone in 10 and a half years on the force, and that if he makes it another 14 and a half years without firing his weapon, it’d be a good career. Barone also said he’s not likely to bump into his old high school friends from Glastonbury, a predominantly white suburb, while out patrolling in Hartford.

“The spots that we patrol, if I see anybody I went to high school with, it’s because they’re a junkie,” Barone said in the video. “It’s sad.”   

Barone was joined by union representatives during his interview with investigators on August 17. The internal affairs report stated that Barone conceded he could have used “a better choice of words, but at the time he believed his words were effective in maintaining control.” The report found that Barone’s behavior constituted conduct unbecoming an officer, but that the interaction did not rise to the level of harassment or a civil rights violation.

Bronin, the mayor, said the police department has to repair damage to the community’s trust after the “trigger happy” episode.

“These words create a very, very real sense of fear,” Bronin said.

Copyright 2018 Connecticut Public Radio

Vanessa de la Torre comes to WNPR after more than a decade as a newspaper reporter at the Hartford Courant, where her storytelling and investigative work on Hartford education was recognized regionally and by the Education Writers Association. She has also written for the St. Petersburg Times in Florida and interned at the Washington Post and the Imperial Valley Press in her native El Centro, Calif., a desert town near the U.S.-Mexico border. Vanessa received her bachelor’s degree from Princeton University and her master's from Stanford’s journalism program.
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