Morgantown First Responders Vote ‘No Confidence’ In City Administration

First responders in Morgantown have held a vote of no confidence in the city council.

First responders in Morgantown have held a vote of no confidence in the city council.

Members of firefighters’ union IAFF Local 313 and the police union Mon Preston FOP Lodge 87 have voted “no confidence” in the Morgantown City Administration.

A vote of no confidence is a vote in which members of a group are asked if they support

the person or group in power, usually in government.

In a press release, firemen cited a yearslong lawsuit with the city over holiday pay for their vote of no confidence. Police cited “recent administrative attacks on the police” including the city’s attempt to create a civilian review board.

The vote comes on the heels of an effort started this summer to recall all members of the city council, as well as a recent controversy around whether the city manager lives in Morgantown.

Morgantown Creates Civilian Police Review Board

Morgantown City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to create a civilian police review board, the culmination of a year-long process sparked by the murder of George Floyd, a Black man, at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer.

In the wake of Floyd’s murder and nationwide protests, Morgantown city officials and community members started to talk about how their city could benefit from a police board with civilian members. The city formed a special committee and it began meeting weekly to hash out the proposal’s details.

“I cannot thank the folks who showed up to the committee enough,” said Deputy Mayor Rachel Fetty during Tuesday’s meeting. “We received the contributions and the careful recommendations and thoughts of really every segment of the population that I can think of, from folks within the department, folks who are married to members of the Morgantown police department, folks who have experienced being policed as persons of color or as members of LGBTQ+ groups, or as human beings.”

The board is the second of its kind in the state, but the first to be created by a city. Bluefield has a similar police review board, formed in the wake of a consent decree by the Department of Justice.

The Morgantown ordinance approved by the council looks markedly different from earlier plans that would’ve given the power to investigate citizen complaints of police misconduct.

The power to investigate was removed from the plan following threats of legal action from West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and the Mon-Preston Fraternal Order of Police (FOP).

Wheeling-based attorney Teresa Toriseva, who represents the FOP, told the Dominion Post Tuesday that she will file a lawsuit challenging the legality of the board. Under the ordinance, the police chief will carry out any police conduct investigations and then send the findings and disciplinary actions to the review board.

The review board will be able to accept the police chief’s actions or suggest their own recommendation, a level of oversight Toriseva says is in violation of state code. The FOP’s view on the board’s legality is not universally held.

“What is at issue here is the question of who runs the Morgantown police department, the chief or the FOP and Ms. Toriseva,” said Bob Cohen, a retired attorney and member of the Morgantown/Kingwood branch of the NAACP. “Here, Chief Powell has accepted the process outlined in the ordinance but the FOP says he cannot do so. Under a strange interpretation of West Virginia statutes, the FOP is attempting to dictate the chief’s process and to tie his hands. Council should not bend to their threat.”

Cohen was one of seven speakers during the public comment portion of Tuesday’s council meeting. Community members and representatives from the Morgantown Human Rights Commission, ACLU of WV, and Morgantown/Kingwood NAACP all spoke in favor of the bill.

“Whenever we help marginalized communities, we help everybody,” said Jerry Carr, president of the Morgantown/Kingwood branch of the NAACP. “So, I just want to make sure that people understand that no one got in this business thinking that it was just about helping that one group. This is something that’s ubiquitous, it can impact every facet of what’s going on, including the police department.”

Under the ordinance, civilians can file complaints against police officers with the board. The board will pass them onto the Morgantown police chief for investigation.

Fetty said this is a significant change from the previous system that required community members to go to the police department and file a complaint directly.

“At the end of the day, the most critical piece is that we will, as a community be contributing to this discussion about how policing will work in our community and how we’d like to see it unfold and how we can contribute and cooperate with the Morgantown police department to ensure that policing happens in a safe and careful way that is respectful of everyone’s constitutional rights, and respectful also of the rights that our officers have as employees of the city,” said Fetty.

Morgantown Advances Police Review Board Plan With Diminished Scope

The Morgantown City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to move forward with a plan to create a Citizens Police Review and Advisory Board.

A vote on final approval of the board is expected in two weeks.

The nine-member board would serve as a go-between for the city residents and the Morgantown Police Department. They have the power to review and make recommendations on internal department policies and hiring practices.

Unlike earlier proposals, the board would not have the power to investigate civilian complaints of police misconduct. West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and the Mon-Preston Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) had threatened to sue if the board had the power to investigate.

Under the current plan, the police chief will conduct any investigations of police misconduct, but the board will be able to review those investigation’s findings — and again — make recommendations.

On Wednesday, an attorney for the FOP told WAJR they were pleased that the investigative power was removed but still planned to sue over the board’s ability to make recommendations to the police chief after an investigation is completed and the board’s power to question witnesses.

Tuesday’s vote marks the culmination of almost a year’s work from city officials and stakeholders that started last summer after the murder of George Floyd in May by a Minneapolis police officer and ensuing nationwide protests.

Bluefield has the only other police review board in the state. The board was formed following a consent decree from the Department of Justice. It has been dysfunctional and out of compliance for much of the last two decades until recent actions by city officials to get the board to function.

Morgantown City Council Hears Civilian Police Review Board Proposal

The Morgantown City Council heard a presentation on a proposed ordinance to create a civilian police review and advisory board at a workshop meeting Tuesday night. If approved, the proposed board would be the second of its kind in West Virginia.

Over the past seven months, a special committee has gathered input from experts on police reform along with a variety of Morgantown city leaders and community members.

“We went section by section and we had a room of people in there,” said Jerry Carr, president of the Morgantown/Kingwood Branch of the NAACP. “We discussed it, we debated it, we argued sometimes. And then when we were done with a particular section we’d move onto the next one.”

The nine-member Morgantown board would review and make recommendations on police department procedures and practices, begin community outreach and investigate civilian complaints of police misconduct.

Bluefield has a similar review board stemming from a 2000 consent decree but with weaker investigation.

In September of last year, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrissey sent the Morgantown City Council a letter questioning the legality of the investigation powers in the proposed ordinance.

Members of the special committee have since changed the language of the proposal and believe it complies with state law.

The process would start with a civilian complaint filed with the board. Then, the board would investigate and the officers involved would present their case.

If, at the end of all that, the board determines that misconduct occurred, it would give the police chief a recommendation.

As required by state law, the police chief retains the authority to implement any disciplinary action.

Mayor Ron Dulaney stressed at Tuesday’s meeting that the proposed ordinance was proactive and praised the past work of the Morgantown Police Department in implementing de-escalation training and a choke-hold ban.

West Virginia University professor and criminal justice expert Jim Nolan spoke during Tuesday’s meeting in support of the proposal.

He cited a 2009 statewide study from the West Virginia Criminal Justice Statistical Analysis Center that found Black drivers were 1.58 times more likely to be stopped by a police officer than white drivers in Morgantown.

The study also found Black drivers were 2.27 times more likely to be searched by police.

“This is not the result of bad actors,” said Nolan. “Discrimination in policing is systemic. We all need to work together to fix it.”

The proposed board would create a level of transparency and community trust in the police force, said Carr.

“We have a police force, they do a lot of good in the city but we know there’s ways that we can improve upon that process,” said Carr “And we’re looking for a structured way for civilians to have that input to make that happen.”

Next, the language of the proposed ordinance will be sent to the West Virginia Attorney General’s office for review.

In Bluefield, City Leaders Address Broken Promise To Hold Police Accountable

It’s been two decades since the city of Bluefield settled a lawsuit with Robert “Robbie” Lemont Ellison, a then 20-year-old Black man whose neck was broken during an arrest by city police.

In addition to paying Ellison $1 million for his injuries, city leaders promised a federal judge in 2000 that they would establish a panel of citizens to review complaints of police misconduct.

Today, this group remains one of very few bodies for civilian oversight of local police in West Virginia. Yet, through interviews and records requests, it’s apparent that the Bluefield Citizen Review Panel has operated out of compliance and out of the public eye since its founding.

Members haven’t produced yearly reports, as required by a federal consent decree detailing the panel’s rules, and there have been years when attorneys said that the panel didn’t meet.

Moreover, the group’s four mandatory meetings per year have been closed to the public, and records from those meetings are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, making it possible for the panel to avoid public scrutiny by citizens and the press.

City leaders agreed in September to formally add the citizen review panel to city code, subjecting the group to the state’s Open Governmental Proceedings Act, after inquiries from West Virginia Public Broadcasting over the summer.

“We definitely need to improve the operation and transparency of that entity,” said Bluefield City Attorney Colin Cline in August. “I mean, it makes me uncomfortable to have to improve the operation and transparency of a city entity, but, you know, it’s our job.”

Ed Hill, one attorney who represented Ellison in his lawsuit 20 years ago, applauded the move by Bluefield, saying he hopes that the panel will become “a more meaningful entity in the future.”

But for the Ellison family, who said that their youngest brother Robbie died from medical complications a few years after the settlement, justice remains elusive.

“I don’t know, maybe I’ll be six feet under the ground by the time [things] change,” said Lynn Ellison, Robbie’s older sister. “If it never happens with my brother, maybe down the line for someone else, but I still think justice should be served for my brother.”

A Large Family With Deep Roots

Robbie Ellison was the youngest of eight siblings, part of a large family with deep roots in southern West Virginia. His grandfather was a coal miner in nearby Landgraff, McDowell County. His uncle, John, is a 2015 West Virginia Music Hall of Fame inductee, known for penning the classic “Some Kind of Wonderful” and his work with the Soul Brothers Six.

Photo courtesy of Lynn Ellison
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Robbie Ellison (center) takes a picture with his siblings, cousins and nephew.

Today, most of the Ellison siblings no longer live in West Virginia, but they return home almost yearly to visit their father, who lives within one of several rows of houses with raised porches, across the train tracks that jut through the town.

“This is the place we love,” said Sam Ellison, one of Robbie’s older brothers. “No matter what happened here, no matter what things we had to deal with growing up, this is our home.”

The Ellisons have experienced a lot of loss in Bluefield. In addition to Robbie’s injuries and eventual death, the siblings said that they lost their mother to cancer in her 40s, and their oldest brother Jimmy was shot and killed in the early ’90s.

This summer, amid the coronavirus pandemic, the Ellison siblings sat around a thick white ledge spanning the width of their father’s home. Wearing cloth face masks, they talked about who Robbie was — a lanky kid with glasses like Steve Urkel’s, a character in the 1990s sitcom “Family Matters.”

Robbie Ellison’s family contend that his 2002 death wouldn’t have happened if not for the injuries he suffered in 1998. The three police officers involved in the arrest, two of whom Ellison said beat him, were never criminally charged or disciplined.

“As a police officer, you have to protect yourself,” Sam Ellison said. “But I think that what they did was they went to the extreme with the force that they used on my brother. I know they did because they paralyzed my brother.”

In June, Robbie’s uncle John Ellison released the song “Wake-Up Call (Black Like Me),” which he first wrote as a poem in 2003 about the injustice that his family and Black Americans have seen. In it, John mentions what happened to his nephew Robbie.

“The bottom line is, his neck was broken, his head was bashed in, and from what I saw in pictures of what was done to him, it was very cruel,” John said during an interview in June. “If this police officer’s life was being threatened, that’s a totally different scenario. But one thing is for sure, he [Robbie] wasn’t armed, he posed no threat to this officer. And they basically broke his neck. They killed him.”

Recalling Robbie’s Case

Robbie Ellison named three city officers in his July 1999 complaint against the city of Bluefield. That includes Dennis Dillow, one of two white men accused interchangeably of beating Robbie during an arrest early on the morning of Sept. 17, 1998.

Dillow has been Bluefield’s chief of police for the last eight years.

“When he went to the ground, he had what was called a diver’s accident,” Dillow said in an interview in July. “He hit his head. He landed on his forehead, and it caused the compression in his neck that severed his spinal cord.”

In Robbie’s complaint, attorneys said that Robbie was outside a nightclub around 2:30 in the morning, gathered around a parked car with his older brother and a couple of friends. The three police officers, who were called for a separate incident, approached Robbie’s group and asked them to leave, “using profanity and offensive insults.”

A screenshot of Robbie Ellison’s complaint

When the group didn’t leave, officers began arresting Robbie’s brother. When Robbie objected, one white officer “pulled Robbie Ellison from the backseat of the car in which he was sitting,” attorneys wrote, and “body-slammed” Robbie against the back of the vehicle.

According to the complaint, witnesses saw either Dillow or the other named white officer, then-Corp. C. Scott Myers, continue to hit Robbie even after he was handcuffed.

“After his neck was broken, Robbie Ellison could not move, and as he lay in the streets with his hands cuffed behind his back, he told the police officers that he could not move and that he was hurt,” Robbie’s attorneys wrote.

The two white officers ignored this, attorneys wrote. They grabbed him “and dragged him face down, with his feet, legs, knees, lower body, and waist all dragging the asphalt street, a distance of approximately 130 feet where they dropped him on the street and left him.”

One of the attorneys who signed Robbie’s July 1999 complaint was Johnnie Cochran, who represented celebrity O.J. Simpson in a California murder trial four years earlier.

Less than two weeks after settling with the city in June 2000, Cochran spoke about Robbie’s case at a church on Charleston’s West Side.

“When you look at what happened to this young man in the prime of his life, it becomes clear it shouldn’t have happened,” Cochran told listeners at Grace Bible Church. “It’s a grave injustice to this young man, who is forever now trapped in his body, paralyzed [by] a person who was sworn to uphold the law.”

Throughout Robbie’s complaint, his attorneys described a “blue line” and “code of silence” that the police department employed to protect the three officers involved in the arrest.

In 2015 under Dillow’s administration, city leaders unanimously agreed to sign a five-year contract for police body cameras. City leaders voted to renew that contract in July.

“I wish we would have had body cameras for that, because then things wouldn’t have been portrayed the way that they were,” Dillow said of the incident with Robbie.

Dillow’s own policy outlines rules for wearing, activating and storing footage from officers’ body cameras.

A screenshot from the Bluefield Police Department Policy Manual

“I just think that it’s a necessary tool that should be on every officer’s chest, as much as the badge that he wears,” Dillow said. “Because it just, it saves you from frivolous complaints, all the way up to some major event.”

Dillow, Myers, and the third officer in Robbie’s complaint – J.M. Williams, a Black officer who was accused of witnessing violence and not intervening – were cleared of wrongdoing by an internal police investigation shortly after Robbie’s arrest, and a later investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting is still waiting on a response to records requests for these documents, from both the city and the FBI.

‘Not What I Would Have Expected Out Of An Active Citizen Review Panel’

Ed Hill, another of Robbie’s attorneys in 1999, said the Bluefield Citizen Review Panel was Cochran’s idea, along with another promise by the city to recruit more minority applicants to its police department.

“He said, ‘I’ve seen this in too many cities,” Hill recalled of Cochran. “‘Minorities are not appropriately represented in the police department, and there’s racial discrimination.’”

The panel that Hill and Cochran requested involves five members. It must include at least one African American member, and one present or former police officer.

The group has to meet quarterly. Members are allowed to investigate any citizen complaint against an officer, or any closed internal investigation of an officer by their superior.

Today, Hill is the only person outside the city who can view the Bluefield Citizen Review Panel’s work over the last 20 years. Hill was granted permission in 2013 after he sued the city for rejecting a records request he submitted for the panel’s first 13 years of meeting minutes.

Hill requested access to the last seven years of documents over the summer, after an interview with West Virginia Public Broadcasting. He was unable to divulge what members reviewed, but he was able to describe their noncompliance with the federal judge’s order from 20 years ago.

“There had been some activity by the citizen review panel, but there were actually several years that they did nothing,” Hill said. “I think there were three years that there were no records at all. When they did have meetings, it was not what I would have expected out of an active citizen review panel.”

According to the new city ordinance, drafted by city attorney Cline with input from Hill, the five-member board will continue to meet quarterly, and members will submit annual reports on their work to city leaders. Cline will attend all panel meetings, and expects the group to begin meeting once new members are appointed in November.

Stifled By State Law, Little Data

Even before city leaders realized the Bluefield Citizen Review Panel was out of compliance, local advocates for police accountability said the group had little teeth to begin with.

Emily Allen
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WVPB
Protesters marched in Bluefield for a Black Lives Matter event in June 2020.

In June, more than a hundred people gathered in Bluefield for a Black Lives Matter rally, one of hundreds of events nationwide after the deaths of Breonna Taylor in Kentucky and George Floyd in Minnesota. It was there that protest organizer Charkera Ervin petitioned attendees to want more from the local citizen review panel.

“They get to make suggestions on employment status, they don’t get to actually make decisions,” Ervin said of the group. “There’s actually a law in West Virginia that’s preventing them from being able to actually have the teeth that citizens really want them to have.”

State code outlines procedures for investigating and disciplining police officers, offering more employment protections to police than for other public employees.

Whereas the law stifles the Bluefield panel’s authority to enforce recommendations, local officials elsewhere have cited this code when rejecting other requests for civilian oversight.

In Morgantown, where city leaders have recently begun meeting to discuss what a local citizen review group would look like, West Virginia’s attorney general has already expressed opposition.

Jerry Carr, who presides over the local chapter of the NAACP in Morgantown, said a group for civilian oversight of police could ignite useful conversations around new ways to improve public safety.

“There’s so much lacking in the public’s understanding of what the police actually do,” Carr said in August. “That needs to be repaired, that needs to be brought to the light, and we think a civilian review board is the first step to actually do something like that.”

In Wheeling, West Virginia NAACP President Owens Brown said he’s been trying to establish a citizen review board for three years.

“Police cannot police themselves. That’s just the reality,” Brown said in September. “It seems as though there would be such stringent checks and balances on these individuals, but there’s not, and that’s what’s so insane about this situation.”

Across the state there is little data examining the interactions of local police with marginalized communities.

The same applies to Bluefield, where the police department voluntarily relays a racial breakdown to the FBI for violent and property crimes, yet it keeps no breakdown for traffic stops and other more common interactions that officers have with the public.

What little FBI data is available shows that Bluefield police have disproportionately arrested Black people throughout the last decade, who comprise only a quarter of the city’s population. For instance, roughly 38% percent of people arrested for violent crime in 2019 were Black.

Determining Justice

While visiting their father in July and looking over old family photos on his front porch, the Ellisons contemplated what justice would look like 18 years after their brother died, even though most of the siblings now live hundreds of miles away from their hometown.

“If they will go back, and actually investigate this case, and not just sweep it under the rug,” Robbie’s sister, Ann Ellison, answered. “Nobody ever came and talked to us. Nobody ever asked us anything.”

From Florida, their uncle John Ellison agreed.

“It is not like they were dealing with somebody 200 pounds or seven feet tall,” John Ellison said. “He could have been handcuffed and put in a car. To me, it sounds like he was treated that way, simply because he was Black. I can’t see them doing the same thing to a white person.”

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

'Say His Name': Protesters Remember History While Marching For Future In Bluefield

In 1998, two white police officers in Bluefield were accused of beating and dragging a young black man, paralyzing him from the neck down. He died in 2002.

His name was Robert Ellison. More than 20 years later, protesters chanted his name and those of other black men and women who have recently died at the hands of police, including George Floyd in Minnesota and Breonna Taylor in Kentucky

Protesters, many wearing face masks, shouted “Say his name” among a sea of signs reading “Black Lives Matter” and “Justice for George Floyd.” Bluefield resident and protest organizer Charkera Ervin wrote “I Can’t Breathe” on her mask, evoking the last words of Floyd and those of Eric Garner, another black man killed by police in 2014. 

“We’re not powerless people, even though events like this make us feel like it,” Ervin said. “We have it in our power right now to change policy. We have it in our power right now to hold people accountable.”

Ervin helped organize the rally over the weekend, not only to protest police violence against the black community, but to inform her friends and neighbors of a little-known Bluefield resource formed after Ellison’s death. 

“We have something that activists have been fighting for all over the country,” she told protesters Saturday, “which is our citizen’s review board.”

Credit Jessica Lilly / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Protesters brought several signs to a rally in Bluefield on Saturday, June 6, 2020.

For the last 20 years, a group of four appointed citizens, police representatives and city officials have met regularly to review police interactions with the public.

In 2013, an attorney for Ellison’s family fought to obtain then-confidential records from the group’s meetings to find out what the group had accomplished since it started, the Charleston Gazette reported. Today, the meetings happen once every three months. They are open to the public, and meeting minutes can be requested from the city clerk’s office. 

“I think the major thing that any city, any area needs to do is to hold the police accountable for what they do. …  Because they are the example that the public sees every day,” said Randolph Phillips, one of the review board’s citizen members. “They should live up to those standards of who they are.” 

In some ways, Bluefield is ahead of other West Virginia cities that have experienced police brutality. Charleston and Wheeling have both received, but not acted on, requests from black leaders to establish a citizen’s review board for their local police departments.

But Ervin and other protest organizers said the city still has a long way to go. For one, members can review cases and provide feedback, but they don’t have enforcement powers.

Further, Ervin said not enough members of the public know about Bluefield’s citizen review board and how to use it. 

“I don’t think they know how to make that mechanism work for them. So, we want to educate on that,” she said.

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Protesters in Bluefield kneeled at an intersection on Saturday, June 6, 2020.

Ervin and April Burroughs, another organizer, also took the opportunity Saturday to educate participants on voting and the U.S. Census, saying the rally was a kick-off to their future events to discuss these and other topics.

“In the wake of all the things that’s going wrong in the world that’s racially motivated, we decided to come together to bring a sense of unity to the Bluefield area,” said Burroughs, who lives in Huntington now. “I realized that I needed to come home to do something, I realized that maybe some of the light needed to be brought to where I’m from, to bring a sense of unity to the community that I grew up in.” 

Coming Home 

Many of Saturday’s participants are residents of Bluefield and the surrounding towns, but the event also drew people who grew up there and had moved away.

Kashayla Collins, who grew up in Bluefield but now lives in Augusta, Georgia, brought her two young sons, Kaivon and Khalil to West Virginia for their first protest.

“I’m out here marching for the future,” Collins said. “I want to make sure that my kids don’t turn into George Floyd.”

“It’s important that they see us standing up for them,” Collins said. “Because at 5 and 8 years old they don’t have the voice or even the mental capacity to always understand the injustice that’s occurring. But I want them to know when they get older, and they’ll remember.” 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Mother Dionna Dowell (center) stands with her daughters Krisalyn and Arionna at a protest in Bluefield, Mercer County on Saturday, June 6, 2020.

After gathering at a local church and marching a half-mile downtown, several speakers, including candidates for the West Virginia Legislature, sitting lawmakers, local faith leaders and vocalists took the stage.

A few blocks away, a black father stood outside, a few blocks away from the rally.

A detective for the Bluefield Police Department, Kevin Ross joined the force about four years ago.

“I mean, you sit around here and you listen to people talk about the ‘police did this,’ ‘the police did that,’ and ‘I wish this would change,’” said Ross. “But you don’t see anyone putting applications in anywhere. So that was my reasoning. … Sometimes, if you want stuff done right, you sometimes have to do it yourself.”  

Although Ross didn’t participate in the rally, he said he was within earshot. 

“And there were some good points,” he said. “I think, you know, hopefully, things will change. But at the same time … we have to come together for it to change.”

Reporter and Southern West Virginia Bureau Chief Jessica Lilly contributed to this report.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 

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