Maine
Advisory group wants to make it harder for Maine police to destroy discipline records
Members of Maine’s public information advisory committee expressed assist for closing a loophole that presently permits police unions to barter shorter timelines for destroying their officers’ self-discipline information. The exemption has enabled police to purge public documentation of misconduct far earlier than the regulation often permits.
Public businesses, together with regulation enforcement, are required to protect closing information of self-discipline for 60 years, based on the Maine State Archives, which units the retention schedules for public information. These information are public in an effort to create transparency round an officer’s previous misdeeds.
However an exemption to the archivist’s schedule permits collective bargaining agreements to barter shorter timetables. Consequently, departments throughout the state have reached agreements with their officers to expunge misconduct information a lot sooner.
Members of a subcommittee of the Proper to Know Advisory Committee, which makes suggestions to policymakers on points associated to Maine’s Freedom of Entry Act, discovered the loophole worrisome throughout a Thursday dialogue. Their advice that the regulation ought to change marked the start of an effort to handle weak spots in guidelines that require officers to reveal documented cases of misconduct, as chronicled in current reporting by the Bangor Day by day Information.
“We have to have a look at the coverage and function of the Freedom of Entry Act, which clearly lays out that information are public, and the federal government is clear. But we’re saying that’s true up till events in a contract negotiation conform to one thing else,” mentioned Rep. Thom Harnett, D-Gardiner, who chairs the committee. “I don’t perceive what the coverage function could be to permit the desire and motion of the Legislature to be trumped in a contract negotiation.”
The committee took up the problem following the Bangor Day by day Information’ reporting and a criticism from Saco-based lawyer Marcus Wraight.
Wraight, who focuses on indigent legal protection, instructed the committee Thursday that he’s particularly fearful about how the destruction of self-discipline might undermine a defendant’s constitutional proper to a good trial.
When prosecutors cost an individual with a criminal offense, they’ve a constitutional obligation to show over any info that might forged doubt on the credibility of police who would possibly function a witness in court docket, known as Giglio materials.
Within the three years since he’s been training in Maine, Wraight has solely obtained Giglio materials twice, each instances from the identical prosecutor, he mentioned. Suspecting prosecutors have been failing of their disclosure obligations, he proactively filed dozens of requests with police departments searching for 10 years price of officer self-discipline information. However many mentioned they didn’t have any to supply.
“Clearly, the why is multifaceted, as a lot of them are small departments. Nevertheless it raises the potential that destruction is occurring elsewhere, whereas the duty to reveal impeachment materials stays,” Wraight mentioned. “It turns into an empty promise when the duty is in place however there are not any information to reveal.”
Wraight was additionally a celebration of curiosity in a current lawsuit in opposition to the town of South Portland by which a former officer sued to forestall officers from releasing her information to Wraight and a fellow officer who requested for copies. She and her union unsuccessfully argued that language within the collective bargaining settlement requiring written reprimands to be faraway from an officer’s file after a yr meant the town needed to destroy them fully.
In the meantime, a choose discovered this summer time that the Maine State Police unlawfully withheld self-discipline information from the BDN and Portland Press Herald attributable to an analogous provision of their contract, highlighting how businesses can interpret language of their union agreements otherwise in terms of eradicating self-discipline. State police leaders later mentioned they didn’t notice the eliminated information have been nonetheless topic to the Maine Freedom of Entry Act.
The subcommittee unanimously voted Thursday to advocate modifications to the regulation that will prohibit unions from negotiating destruction timetables of underneath 20 years. If the complete committee adopts the advice, will probably be forwarded to the Maine Legislature’s Joint Standing Committee on Judiciary, which might suggest laws.
Extra articles from the BDN
Maine
Texas man pleads guilty to stealing $400K from vacationing Maine couple
A Texas man has pleaded guilty to stealing nearly $400,000 from a Maine couple while they were on vacation.
Kyle Lawless Pollar, 27, entered his plea to four counts of wire fraud Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Bangor, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.
In August 2022, Pollar called the couple’s bank pretending to be the account holder and requested the account’s balance and updated the contact phone number, the U.S. attorney’s office said Tuesday. Shortly after, Pollar changed the contact email address as well.
Over a two-week period, Pollar made several transfers from the couple’s home equity line of credit to their savings account. Pollar then made four wire transfers totalling $360,880 to a Texas bank account in his name, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.
Pollar transferred $66,000 from one transfer to a jeweler, also in Texas.
The U.S. attorney’s office said that Pollar withdrew funds from his account in cash and cashier’s checks. He then deposited the cashier’s checks in other Texas bank accounts in his name.
He was captured on security camera making deposits and withdrawals, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.
The couple discovered the theft when they returned from vacation and couldn’t log into their bank account. When the bank reset their username and password, they found multiple wire transfers on their statement.
The FBI began investigating in October 2022.
Pollar faces up to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $250,000 for each of the four counts of wire fraud, as well as up to three years of supervised release. He also will be ordered to pay restitution to the victims.
Maine
Tell us your favorite local Maine grocery store and the best things to get there
Mainers like to hold onto local secrets like precious jewels. The best place to get pizza. The best place to watch the sun rise or set. Secret parking spots that people from away don’t know about.
It’s the same with grocery stores — not just the big chains that dominate the state, but also the little mom-and-pop grocers in towns and cities from Stockholm to Shapleigh. Who’s got the cheapest eggs? The best cuts of meat? A great deli? Farm-fresh produce? There’s a good chance one of your local markets has got at least one of those.
We want to know: what are your favorite hidden gem markets in Maine, and what in particular do they specialize in selling? Let us know in the form below, or leave a comment. We’ll follow up with a story featuring your answers in a few days. We’ll try to keep it just between us Mainers, but we can’t guarantee a few out-of-staters won’t catch on to these local secrets.
Favorite local grocery stores
Maine
Bangor city councilor announces bid for open Maine House seat
A current Bangor city councilor is running in a special election for an open seat in the Legislature, which Rep. Joe Perry left to become Maine’s treasurer.
Carolyn Fish, who’s serving her first term on the Bangor City Council, announced in a Jan. 4 Facebook post that she’s running as a Republican to represent House District 24, which covers parts of Bangor, Brewer, Orono and Veazie.
“I am not a politician, but what goes on in Augusta affects us here and it’s time to get involved,” Fish wrote in the post. “I am just a regular citizen of this community with a lineage of hard work, passion and appreciation for the freedom and liberties we have in this community and state.”
Fish’s announcement comes roughly two weeks after Sean Faircloth, a former Democratic state lawmaker and Bangor city councilor, announced he’s running as a Democrat to represent House District 24.
The special election to fill Perry’s seat will take place on Feb. 25.
Fish, a local real estate agent, was elected to the Bangor city council in November 2023 and is currently serving a three-year term.
Fish previously told the Bangor Daily News that her family moved to the city when she was 13 and has worked in the local real estate industry since earning her real estate license when she was 28.
When she ran for the Bangor City Council in 2023, Fish expressed a particular interest in tackling homelessness and substance use in the community while bolstering economic development. To do this, she suggested reviving the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) Program in schools and creating a task force to identify where people who are homeless in Bangor came from.
Now, Fish said she sees small businesses and families of all ages struggling to make ends meet due to the rising cost of housing, groceries, child care, health care and other expenses. Meanwhile, the funding and services the government should direct to help is being “focused elsewhere,” she said.
“I feel too many of us are left behind and ignored,” Fish wrote in her Facebook post. “The complexities that got us here are multifaceted and the solutions aren’t always simple. But, I can tell you it’s time to try and I will do all I can to help improve things for a better future for all of us.”
Faircloth served five terms in the Maine House and Senate between 1992 and 2008, then held a seat on the Bangor City Council from 2014 to 2017, including one year as mayor. He also briefly ran for Maine governor in 2018 and for the U.S. House in 2002.
A mental health and child advocate, Faircloth founded the Maine Discovery Museum in Bangor and was the executive director of the city’s Together Place Peer Run Recovery Center until last year.
Fish did not return requests for comment Tuesday.
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