Former Burlington police chief Brandon del Pozo's failure to list his anonymous Twitter account in court filings related to ongoing excessive force lawsuits was not significant enough to warrant sanctions against the city, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.
As part of discovery in the civil cases filed by Mabior Jok and a group of brothers, who claimed injuries from their separate downtown arrests in 2018, their attorneys asked del Pozo to provide information about his social media accounts. In responses dated October 30 and November 6, the chief did not disclose the @WinkleWatchers Twitter account he'd used. And the city's attorneys did not disclose information about the internal investigation that had followed del Pozo's private admission last July to Mayor Miro Weinberger.
Sessions was unmoved by the attorneys' claims that the city had perpetrated "a fraud" on the court by knowingly providing false answers under oath.
Sessions' five-page order found no evidence that the omissions had caused any "discernable [sic] harm" and faulted the plaintiff's attorneys for not first trying to resolve with the city what Sessions deemed "a discovery dispute."
The cases will proceed, though the litigation has become especially heated in recent weeks.
The plaintiffs' attorneys, Evan Chadwick and Robb Spensley of Chadwick & Spensley PLLC, are seeking to review new troves of documents in light of the social media scandal that has beset the police department.
The city's outside counsel, Lynn, Lynn, Blackman & Manitsky, P.C., complained in filings this week that those requests have amounted to a bad-faith effort to "harass" city officials and attorneys "as a ploy for more media coverage in this case."
The parties have asked Sessions to resolve the dispute.
The city has acknowledged in filings, however, that del Pozo's actions may become an obstacle should the cases go to trial.
"If anything, del Pozo has created an advantage, not prejudice, for Plaintiffs that otherwise would not exist," attorney Pietro J. Lynn wrote in a filing last month. "They may be able to use the interrogatory omission at trial on issues of credibility."
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Bio:
Derek Brouwer is a news reporter at Seven Days, focusing on law enforcement and courts. He previously worked at the Missoula Independent, a Montana alt-weekly.