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Murderous Pig who killed Tamir Rice hired by Bellaire, Ohio, police department

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...tamir-rice-hired-bellaire-ohio-police-n917391

Officer who fatally shot Tamir Rice hired by Bellaire, Ohio, police department

BELLAIRE, Ohio — The former Cleveland police officer who fatally shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice has been hired by a police department in a small Ohio village.

The Times Leader reports Bellaire's police chief Richard Flanagan confirmed Friday he hired Timothy Loehmann as a part-time officer.

The officer, who is white, was fired last year for reasons not related to Rice's death. He was deemed “unfit for duty" and dismissed for giving false information on his job application to the Cleveland Division of Police.

In November 2014, Loehmann and his then-partner, Frank Garmback, responded to a 911 call that reported a possible man waving a gun at a recreation center in Cleveland. When the officers arrived they encountered Rice, which is when Loehmann, citing credible fear, jumped out of his patrol car and fired his service weapon twice.

In late 2015, the Grand Jury declined to indict both officers on criminal charges. This decision came after an expert review of video of the incident showed that Rice had his hands in his pocket, and was playing with a pellet gun.

"The death of Tamir Rice was an absolute tragedy," Cuyahoga County prosecutor Timothy McGinty said after a grand jury decided not to indict the officers. "But it was not, by the law that binds us, a crime."

Bellaire's police chief, also citing lack of criminal charges for hiring the embattled officer, said that Loehmann deserves a second chance.

News of Loehmann's recent employment comes after the recent conviction of Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke after fatally shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times in October 2014.
 
http://www.timesleaderonline.com/ne...bellaire-adds-loehmann-smith-to-police-force/

Flanagan said Friday he had no reservations about hiring Loehmann to work in his department.

“He was cleared of any and all wrongdoing,” Flanagan said of Loehmann. “He was never charged. It’s over and done with.”

According to published reports, Independence Deputy Chief Jim Polak wrote in Loehmann’s personnel file that he was “weepy” and “distracted” during firearms training. He allegedly told Polak that he was having trouble with his girlfriend at the time. But the deputy went further in his statements about Loehmann’s competence.

“He could not follow simple directions, could not communicate clear thoughts nor recollections, and his handgun performance was dismal,” Polak wrote in 2012.

Polak recommended that Loehmann should leave the department.

“I do not believe time, nor training, will be able to change or correct the deficiencies,” Polak wrote.

He also said Loehmann lacked “maturity” to continue working for the Independence department, published reports indicate.

In 2009, Loehmann also failed an exam administered by the Maple Heights, Ohio, police department. Published reports indicate he failed to disclose that in his application to Cleveland, too.

Flanagan said he never had reservations about hiring Loehmann because he was cleared of any wrongdoing regarding Rice’s death. He said he does not believe it is fair for people to “crucify” Loehmann about what happened.

“I have full confidence and faith in every police officer here,” Flanagan said. “We have eight full-time officers and five part-time officers. And if anyone is looking for a part-time job, call me. All officers are on a probationary period of one year.”
 
https://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2018/10/ex-cleveland_officer_who_kille.html

Ex-Cleveland officer who killed Tamir Rice backs out of part-time job with Ohio police department


CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The former Cleveland police officer who fatally shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice has backed out of taking a part-time job with an Ohio police department that recently agreed to hire him.

Tamir's mother, Samaria Rice, announced at a Wednesday news conference that Timothy Loehmann rescinded his application to the Bellaire Police Department.

Samaria Rice said she is relieved that Loehmann will not be patrolling Bellaire.

"Hopefully he will never be employed by any [police department] in America," she said during the news conference. "He is unfit to be a police officer, period."

Jeff Follmer, the president of the Cleveland Police Patrolmen's Association union that represents rank-and-file officers, also confirmed that Loehmann decided not to take the job. Follmer cited "political pressure" as the reason Loehmann decided to rescind his application.

The village of Bellaire hired Loehmann last week to serve as a part-time police officer. Bellaire is a small town of about 4,000 people that borders the Ohio River at the West Virginia border.

Bellaire's police chief, Richard "Dick" Flanagan defended his decision in a statement to the Wheeling, West Virginia newspaper The Intelligencer: "(Loehmann) was cleared of any and all wrongdoing. He was never charged. It's over and done with."

Attempts to reach Flanagan on Wednesday were not successful.

Rice said during Wednesday's news conference that she strongly disagreed with Flanagan's decision to offer Loehmann a job, calling it a "personal attack on [her] family."

"[Loehmann] doesn't deserve any second chances," she said.

Rice said she has not spoken to Flanagan. But her Chicago-based attorney, Billy Joe Mills, reached Flanagan on Wednesday to discuss the job offer to Loehmann, she said.

Activists, including from the Cleveland chapter of Black Lives Matter, contacted Bellaire officials and residents in the days after Loehmann's job offer was made public. Rice and BLM organizer Kareem Henton credited those efforts for getting Loehmann to back out of the part-time job.

"This wouldn't have happened if it were not for outside forces putting pressure on Chief Flanagan," Henton said.

Loehmann shot and killed Tamir Nov. 14, 2014 outside the Cudell Recreation Center on the city's West Side. Loehmann was a rookie officer, and a passenger in a car driving by veteran training officer Frank Garmback.

The two officers responded to a 911 call about someone pointing a gun at people outside the recreation center. The 911 caller told a dispatcher that the gun looked fake, but that information was never relayed to the officers.

Garmback drove his car within feet of the now-demolished gazebo, and Loehmann shot the 12-year-old boy almost immediately after he got out of the car. Tamir died early the next morning at a Cleveland hospital.

A Cuyahoga County grand jury declined to bring criminal charges against Loehmann in Tamir's death, but the city of Cleveland fired him in May 2017, not for the shooting, but for lying on his application when he applied for his job.

One of the more glaring omissions was that Loehmann did not disclose that he was dismissed from the Independence Police Department after they determined he was unfit to serve on its department. His personnel file from that job noted that Loehmann broke down and cried on the shooting range.

Henton, during Wednesday's news conference, criticized the Bellaire Police Department for trying to hire Loehmann despite his history in Cleveland and Independence.

"Once again, you had a municipality that was going to hire him despite the warning signs," Henton said.

Loehmann has appealed the termination from his Cleveland job ,and the arbitration is still pending, said Henry Hilow, the attorney representing Loehmann in the arbitration case.
 
http://www.wcbe.org/post/cop-who-killed-tamir-rice-wont-get-his-job-back

Cop Who Killed Tamir Rice Won't Get His Job Back

An arbitrator says the white Cleveland police officer fired after fatally shooting a 12-year-old black boy playing with a pellet gun in 2014 won't get his job back.

Timothy Loehmann was cleared of criminal charges in the death of Tamir Rice. He was fired last year for failing to disclose he'd been forced out of a job by the East Cleveland police department. Loehmann lost his challenge in arbitration. His union says it will appeal.
 
https://www.cleveland.com/metro/201...-who-killed-tamir-rice-back-to-the-force.html

Cleveland police union determined to return officer who killed Tamir Rice back to the force


CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland police union officials on Wednesday vowed to keep fighting the firing of Timothy Loehmann, the former Cleveland police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice.

The announcement came at a press conference held house after an arbitratorruling that upheld Loehmann’s firing was released to the public.

Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association President Jeff Follmer said the union will appeal the arbitrator’s decision that Cleveland was justified in firing Loehmann, who was fired not for the shooting but for lying several times on his police application.

CPPA attorney Henry Hilow said they will focus their appeal on what they believe are inconsistencies in the ruling and that the arbitrator’s decision was affected by public pressure outside the facts of the case.

“Voltaire said law is common sense,” Hilow said. “What’s missing here is common sense.”

The arbitrator, James Rimmel, ruled that Loehmann purposefully withheld information on his Cleveland police application about the circumstances around his departure from Independence police.

Loehmann was allowed to resign from the Independence department after six months following a series of incidents where supervisors determined he was unfit to be a police officer.

The disciplinary letter cites a letter in Loehmann's personnel file from Independence that says he was emotionally immature and had "an inability to emotionally function." The letter also cites an emotional breakdown Loehmann had on the gun range in Independence.

An appeal to an arbitrator’s decision is rare, except when it involves the firing or permanent termination of employment, CPPA attorney Marisa Serrat said. She said the Cleveland has recently appealed two arbitration decisions that re-established an officer’s employment and is awaiting the city’s decision on whether or not they will appeal a recent arbitrator’s decision to re-instate officer Alan Buford, who fatally shot an unarmed burglary suspect in 2015.

The appeal must be filed in the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas within 90 days. Serrat said she expects the appeal to be filed in less time than that.

Hilow said the arbitrator’s ruling is inconsistent because the arbitrator both dismissed and sustained separate arguments about if Loehmann lied on his application.

“Hopefully we can find a judge who can read things, look through all the information and get to the facts of this case,” Follmer said.

Follmer and Hilow both continued their arguments that the city looked for any way to fire Loehmann after the shooting.

When five investigations, including a Cuyahoga County grand jury, found no wrongdoing by Loehmann, the city turned to his application as a reason for firing him, Follmer said. At one point during Wednesday’s news conference, Follmer called the decision “bulls—t.”

“He contradicts himself all over this decision,” Follmer said.
 
When you listen to season 3 of the Serial podcast about Cleveland court system, you understand exactly how a move like this makes sense.

I don't understand why bruh still wants to be a cop tho. You're hated probly more now than ever and everybody knows who you are, you're in Cleveland (or somewhere else in Ohio) so it's definitely not about the money...I don't understand how people like this who get caught up in these media shit storms return to the same jobs in damn near the same area like nothing happened. You'd put yourself back in that situation for what?

Anyway I hope he catch a stray to the carotid. Fuck him.
 
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