Mayor Miro Weinberger Credit: Luke Awtry

Updated at 3:23 p.m.

Burlington Police Chief Brandon del Pozo has resigned, days after admitting he created an anonymous Twitter account to harass a local political activist, Mayor Miro Weinberger said on Monday.

The mayor, who had defended the city’s top cop last week, announced the news at a press conference at the Burlington Police Department’s headquarters on North Avenue.

“I will miss him greatly, and I believe Burlington will as well,” Weinberger told members of the media.

Deputy Police Chief Jan Wright will serve as acting chief, the mayor said: “I will have more to share about the appointment of a permanent chief in the days to come.”

Del Pozo did not attend the event but tweeted out his resignation letter shortly after the press conference began.

“It was such an honor and a privilege to be our city’s Chief of Police,” he tweeted. “I’m looking forward to future opportunities to serve, and happy and healthy times with my family.”

In the letter addressed to Weinberger, del Pozo described serving as chief as “the noblest thing I have ever done.” As for his future, he wrote of plans to resume writing a book he’d been working on about American policing before Burlington hired him in 2015.

Brandon del Pozo on Friday Credit: Derek Brouwer

“My Ph.D. in political philosophy is also imminent, and one of my goals has been to help establish a research center for the study of policing and public health,” del Pozo wrote. “These challenges and others lie before me, and I feel the best way to advance the state of American policing and find personal fulfillment will now be to pursue them.”

The chief admitted to Seven Days last week that he’d created a Twitter account on July 4 and used it to troll activist Charles Winkleman. Del Pozo sent about 10 messages from the WinkleWatchers account before he deleted it. Winkleman took screenshots of the tweets and shared them with Seven Days later that month.

This reporter asked del Pozo about the account on July 23, and he denied his actions nearly a dozen times during the 36-minute interview. Del Pozo told reporters last week that he knew what he’d done was wrong, and he admitted it to Weinberger on July 28.

Weinberger put del Pozo on paid administrative leave and stripped him of his badge, gun and phone. But the mayor said he did not notify city councilors, police commissioners or the public in order to protect the chief’s privacy.

“I took actions that were informed by compassion,” Weinberger said, adding, “There certainly are situations where a notice to those other bodies would be appropriate. We do not feel at any point in this process that we had reached that point until recent days.”

The city announced on August 2 that del Pozo was on a family and medical leave of absence. Officials and del Pozo refused to say why. The chief returned to duty in mid-September.

The mayor told Seven Days last week that del Pozo’s actions were linked to an underlying medical condition. And the chief said stress from the job and his brain injury caused by a June 2018 bike crash impaired his judgment.

Seven Days released on Friday six and a half minutes of the July 23 call with this reporter, during which del Pozo repeatedly denied creating the WinkleWatchers account. Weinberger said he listened to the interview recording on Friday.

“I think it’s fair to say that he … understated the degree to which that conversation went,” the mayor said.

Weinberger said he only disclosed the chief’s actions because this reporter asked him about them directly. The mayor denied the notion that he lied by omission.

“It’s been a very hard issue for me from the day it started, but I hope people will see that I acted with integrity and did the best I could through a challenging time,” he said.

City Councilor Max Tracy (P-Ward 2) isn’t among them. Tracy said Weinberger “engaged in a cover-up” by not informing councilors back in July, but Tracy stopped short of saying the mayor should resign.

“His actions here have really damaged public trust,” Tracy said.

Media members listen to Mayor Miro Weinberger, at podium Credit: Luke Awtry

He noted that Weinberger campaigned on a promise to be more transparent than previous city administrations: “What this situation shows us is that he hasn’t,” Tracy said.

City Council President Kurt Wright (R-Ward 4) disagreed that the mayor “intentionally covered it up” but acknowledged that “the optics are not good, frankly, because it came from a reporter … rather than being brought up first.”

Wright anticipates that one of his fellow councilors will ask for the issue to be added to Monday’s city council meeting, which begins at 7 p.m. in Contois Auditorium.

Beforehand, at 6:15 p.m., the Peace & Justice Center has scheduled a “Demonstration to Dismantle Collusion within Burlington Leadership” rally outside of city hall to demand an investigation into the mayor’s “lies and coverup.”

“[Weinberger] lied by omission by failing to inform City Council, the Police Commission, and the broader community of del Pozo’s conduct,” the group wrote in a press release. “Mayor Weinberger is ultimately responsible for del Pozo’s job performance and needs to answer as to whether he was aware of the Chief lying to the media last summer.”

The Vermont Progressive Party, in a press release Monday morning, urged del Pozo to resign and also called for Weinberger “to be held accountable.”

At his press conference Monday, Weinberger blasted the party for issuing the release, saying he’d told the Progs on Sunday that del Pozo intended to resign.

“They still felt the need pile on this morning, call for his resignation,” the mayor said. “I think that was particularly cruel, and I hope they’ll consider withdrawing that and acknowledging that that was uncalled for.”

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Courtney Lamdin is a staff writer at Seven Days, covering politics, policy and public safety in Burlington. She has received top honors from the New England Newspaper & Press Association, including for "Warning Shots," a coauthored investigation into...

22 replies on “Burlington Police Chief Resigns After Twitter Trolling Scandal”

  1. OMG, the self-righteousness is ridiculous.

    And this statement is particularly ironic:

    “We are also extremely concerned by the lack of the Mayor’s engagement with the Police Commission and City Council on this issue, and lack of transparency with the community. We should not hear about these issues only if and when the media brings them to light.”

    Let me translate:

    “We are also extremely concerned by the lack of Mayor Kiss’s engagement with the City Council on the secret loan to BT, and lack of transparency with the community. We should not hear about these issues only if and when the media brings them to light.”

  2. I’m glad he finally resigned.. Now hopefully they will be more careful in the future who they hire! Next up is to replace lyin Miro….

  3. “Mayor Weinberger is ultimately responsible for del Pozo’s job performance and needs to answer as to whether he was aware of the Chief lying to the media last summer.”

    Do the progs boycott Seven Days or something? This question was answered definitively in the very first article covering the story. Miro knew since July 28th.

    “On July 28, del Pozo went to Weinberger’s home to admit to his boss that he’d created and run the account, both men said. Weinberger placed the chief on paid administrative leave, stripped del Pozo of his gun, badge and cellphone, and ordered him to stay off social media. “

  4. A loss for Burlington, sad it ended this way. Mistakes were made, but it would have been nice to show that as a community we can forgive and appreciate when our leaders admit mistakes. I wish him well, I dont think the city is better or safer now that he is gone.

  5. It is sad that all the ones who were quick to declare people who committed crimes due to mental health issues deserved second chances but then can’t wait to get rid of the Chief. So Grape I guess the next person who has a mental health crisis and endangers the public needs to be dealt with severely with no second chance then.

  6. “tweeted out his resignation letter”

    Of course he did.

    Seriously, though, this was the right thing to do and I wish him well. Now it’s time for for City Council to hold Miro accountable for his actions and inactions during all of this.

    I do wonder if Joan Shannon’s refusal to take up the ranked-choice voting issue has less to do with not having enough time, and more to do with the fact that Miro’s tenure is at risk.

  7. CONCERNED, anyone with a mental health condition should not be allowed to own or carry a gun.. Who knows what else he could do and blame it on his illness! He could shoot someone and blame it on that. Would he get away with it and be forgiven? I don’t think so! So no, he should not be given a second chance to be a police chief and should get ongoing treatment like anyone else..

  8. The mayor knew on July 28, the day Del Pozo confessed to him. But he did not require del Pozo to get back to the reporter and tell the truth, either before or after del Pozo’s paid leave of absence.

    Neither del Pozo nor the mayor has an excuse. After two independent medical doctors both cleared him, Del Pozo was fit when he returned to work on September 15. He could have corrected the record then on his own initiative. If not, it was up to the mayor to tell del Pozo to come clean with the Seven Days reporter. Instead, the mayor and del Pozo continued to cover up the trolling and the lies for 3 more months. As the head injury could not reasonably explain his failure to correct the lies after his return on September 15, Del Pozo did the right thing to resign. But his resignation does not clear his partner in the 3-month cover up, the mayor. He has no excuse at all. He should do the right thing and resign, too.

  9. “Weinberger trolls on this site under a pseudonym. Guess the sock puppet he uses.”

    I’m sure we’d all love to know. It would explain why he covered this story up, too.

  10. I wish Del Pozo well in his future endeavors as TBI will be with him the rest of his life , but he did need to resign. I don’t know if Miro leaned on him to go but I wouldn’t be surprised.

    So . . . dishonesty about a Twitter tirade gets the Chief to resign, but leaving a gaping hole in the middle of downtown and doing too much of that business in executive session plus fudging a lot of the details to say nothing of the TIF giveaways and Miro gets to stay? Very Trumpian of our Neo-liberal huckster mayor.

  11. A loss for Butlington. Interesting that the Progressive Party has so much compassion for the low income population of this city and none whatsoever for a hardworking person making a mistake or having a mental health problem.

  12. “del Pozo described serving as chief as “the noblest thing I have ever done.”

    Get over yourself buddy, there was nothing “noble” about your conduct. You’re a legend in your own mind.

  13. Bring back Mike Schirling as chief? A true professional. That is, if he’d be willing to serve.

    OTOH, if the Mayor uses the standards and qualifications he used to appoint Chapin Spencer as Director of Public Works, virtually anyone could serve as Police Chief, so long as they simply raised money for the mayor.

    For example, in the case of public works, who apparently needs any kind of traffic engineering or civil engineering background if one has a liberal arts degree and served as a bicycle lobbyist. This could really open up the possibilities of who is “qualified” to lead the police department.

  14. I hope for the sake of the people commenting here that compassion finds you when you need it, because clearly the comments here don’t show any. There was nothing criminal here. Many of the comments here are from people posting anonymous. The Mayor is under NO obligation to disclose Personnel issues and surely not to discuss medical issues, especially with the HIPPA laws that are in affect.

  15. Curious what the good Mayor’s Twitter troll account handle is? Kind of sad that the folks in positions of authority and public trust can behave like teenagers to bolster and protect their fragile egos. Grow up fellas.

  16. So investigate the whole police departments, Mayor’s offices and the state employees to see if they have any aliases on social media! I’m sure you will find a lot that do. There’s no law against that but trolling people to bully them is a whole different story! If anyone suspects this behavior on social media it should be reported right away.. What was done by the police officers in this case was very wrong and yes they should be punished for it. del Pozo used mental illness as his excuse but he was blaming his bike accident as his excuse. Meanwhile apparently he has been doing this for a few years according to other people..

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