Rotterdam town officials spar over police audit | The Daily Gazette
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Two Rotterdam town board members got into a heated discussion about a $25,000 audit on the Rotterdam Town Police Department following a brief presentation by members of the law firm that conducted the audit and during questions raised by the police chief.
“Forgive my passion,” said Town Supervisor Steven Tommasone after closing the public comment portion of the meeting. “I’m over the misinformation campaign.”
Chief G. William Manikas was in the middle of asking questions to the town supervisor, to which board member Joseph Guidarelli was agreeing with, when Tommasone became frustrated with both the chief and Guidarelli telling them they were being inappropriate during the meeting.
Rotterdam police chief questions audit, calls out ‘several inaccuracies and false implications’ | The Daily Gazette
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By Shenandoah Briere |
Rotterdam Police Chief G. William Manikas is raising concerns over a $25,000 audit conducted by a law firm the town hired after the town supervisor’s office sent a news release Thursday that the chief said is woefully inaccurate.
“I feel compelled to address several inaccuracies and false implications outlined in the unsigned press release sent by the Town of Rotterdam on February 17, 2021 and will outline them below,” Manikas said Friday in a release.
Manikas’ release comes after Town Supervisor Steven Tommasone’s office sent a release Thursday stating an audit done by Albany law firm Barclay Damon found the department lacked policies and procedures on how to handle the town’s sex offender registry. Those findings come after a February 2017 event in which an officer was disciplined after he failed to properly registe
Rotterdam Police Department sex offender registry policy failure leads to audit | The Daily Gazette
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By Shenandoah Briere |
A Rotterdam police officer was reprimanded after failing to properly register a sex offender in town, a mistake that set off a $25,000 audit of the town Police Department and resulted in the sex offender getting charged for failing to properly register.
According to a press release from the town supervisor, an officer was disciplined after a Level 1 sex offender emailed an updated photo to the Police Department for the registry, even though department policy and state law require the person show up for their photo. The emailed photo was not properly uploaded to the registry and the offender was subsequently charged for the officer’s mistake. A Level 1 sex offender has a low risk of a repeat offense, Level 2 has a moderate risk and Level 3 has a high risk.
Quinton Chandler / StateImpact Oklahoma
Oklahoma has made some big changes to its justice system in recent years. Activists and lawmakers proposed big picture reforms and some of the suggestions succeeded.
Voters decided to give more lenient sentences to people convicted of drug possession and certain low level property crimes in 2016. Lawmakers extended those benefits to some people convicted of the same crimes before the law changed.
Lawmakers also made granting state prisoners parole easier and more efficient leading to increases in early releases. People living under state supervision now face less strict penalties for breaking technical rules they’re required to follow.
Oklahoma Lawmakers Propose Targeted Criminal Justice Reforms kgou.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kgou.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.