News (Media Awareness Project) - US MN: Officials Angered By St. Paul Officers Posing As Census |
Title: | US MN: Officials Angered By St. Paul Officers Posing As Census |
Published On: | 2000-06-30 |
Source: | Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 17:45:54 |
OFFICIALS ANGERED BY ST. PAUL OFFICERS POSING AS CENSUS TAKERS
Two St. Paul Police Officers Investigating An Alleged Drug House Posed As
U.S. Census Workers Earlier This Month.
Patricia Waller, the U.S. Census Bureau manager for Ramsey and Washington
counties, said Thursday that she was "just awed" by the officers' duplicity
and that she was checking with the regional office in Kansas City to
determine whether impersonating a census worker constitutes a federal
offense. And Ramsey County public defenders, who informed the Census Bureau
of the ruse by the officers, questioned whether it was legal or ethical. "I
don't know if [the officers] broke the law, but it seems to me that what
they did was highly unethical and so unprofessional that it should be
discontinued immediately," said Diane Alshouse, an assistant public
defender. Federal officials, concerned that members of minority groups are
undercounted in the census, have waged a campaign this year to convince the
public that census data is kept private and that census workers can be
trusted. St. Paul police spokesman Michael Jordan confirmed that the
officers said they were census workers, but his account of the incident
differs from a written police report. Jordan said that he couldn't explain
the differences between the accounts, but that he may have more information
today. Department officials haven't talked to the officers about the
incident because one was on vacation and the other was away at training, he
said. Asked whether the department believes such conduct is proper, Jordan
said, "I'll give you a response to that at a different time." According to
Jordan, the incident on June 6 began as the two officers were talking to a
resident who complained about an alleged drug house on St. Paul's East Side.
When a person suspected of selling drugs at the house approached the
officers and demanded to know who they were and what they were talking
about, the officers replied that they were census takers, Jordan said. But
a written report filed the day of the incident says that the two officers,
posing as census workers, went to the alleged drug house in the 1000 block
of Greenbrier St. and asked Heidi Frison for information about who lived at
the house. The report doesn't name the officers. Several hours later,
officers executed a search warrant at the house and arrested four people,
including Frison. Some of those arrested were black and some were white.
Frison and two other people were issued citations for operating a
disorderly house, but charges were later dropped against Frison and one of
the other people. Frison confirmed Thursday that two men who said they were
census workers talked to her outside of the house before it was searched.
"They just said they were census workers," she said. "They said they were
sent out because two houses had not filled out their forms. I took them as
who they said they were. But I'm learning."
Concerned about trust Several public defenders said that, at the request of
census officials, they have been encouraging clients, many of whom are poor
and minorities, to cooperate with census workers. Now, the public defenders
worry they have lost their clients' trust.
Waller said Thursday that she fears the St. Paul incident may undermine
public confidence in Census Bureau workers who don't condone and had no
knowledge that officers were posing as census takers. "I really want people
to know that if they have any concerns about this, I will take their calls
directly. I don't want the credibility of the St. Paul census office
injured by this. We had absolutely no idea about this," she said. The
Washington Post reported in February that census officials in Texas earlier
this year rejected an FBI agent's demand for a census worker badge and
other identification in order to impersonate a census employee. Federal law
states that "whoever falsely assumes or pretends to be an officer or
employee acting under the authority of the United States or any department,
agency, or officer thereof, and acts as such, or in such pretended
character demands or obtains any money, paper, document, or thing of value,
shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or
both."
Census Bureau officials have yet to contact the Police Department about the
incident, Jordan said. He added that he is not aware of any other incidents
in which officers posed as census workers.
Two St. Paul Police Officers Investigating An Alleged Drug House Posed As
U.S. Census Workers Earlier This Month.
Patricia Waller, the U.S. Census Bureau manager for Ramsey and Washington
counties, said Thursday that she was "just awed" by the officers' duplicity
and that she was checking with the regional office in Kansas City to
determine whether impersonating a census worker constitutes a federal
offense. And Ramsey County public defenders, who informed the Census Bureau
of the ruse by the officers, questioned whether it was legal or ethical. "I
don't know if [the officers] broke the law, but it seems to me that what
they did was highly unethical and so unprofessional that it should be
discontinued immediately," said Diane Alshouse, an assistant public
defender. Federal officials, concerned that members of minority groups are
undercounted in the census, have waged a campaign this year to convince the
public that census data is kept private and that census workers can be
trusted. St. Paul police spokesman Michael Jordan confirmed that the
officers said they were census workers, but his account of the incident
differs from a written police report. Jordan said that he couldn't explain
the differences between the accounts, but that he may have more information
today. Department officials haven't talked to the officers about the
incident because one was on vacation and the other was away at training, he
said. Asked whether the department believes such conduct is proper, Jordan
said, "I'll give you a response to that at a different time." According to
Jordan, the incident on June 6 began as the two officers were talking to a
resident who complained about an alleged drug house on St. Paul's East Side.
When a person suspected of selling drugs at the house approached the
officers and demanded to know who they were and what they were talking
about, the officers replied that they were census takers, Jordan said. But
a written report filed the day of the incident says that the two officers,
posing as census workers, went to the alleged drug house in the 1000 block
of Greenbrier St. and asked Heidi Frison for information about who lived at
the house. The report doesn't name the officers. Several hours later,
officers executed a search warrant at the house and arrested four people,
including Frison. Some of those arrested were black and some were white.
Frison and two other people were issued citations for operating a
disorderly house, but charges were later dropped against Frison and one of
the other people. Frison confirmed Thursday that two men who said they were
census workers talked to her outside of the house before it was searched.
"They just said they were census workers," she said. "They said they were
sent out because two houses had not filled out their forms. I took them as
who they said they were. But I'm learning."
Concerned about trust Several public defenders said that, at the request of
census officials, they have been encouraging clients, many of whom are poor
and minorities, to cooperate with census workers. Now, the public defenders
worry they have lost their clients' trust.
Waller said Thursday that she fears the St. Paul incident may undermine
public confidence in Census Bureau workers who don't condone and had no
knowledge that officers were posing as census takers. "I really want people
to know that if they have any concerns about this, I will take their calls
directly. I don't want the credibility of the St. Paul census office
injured by this. We had absolutely no idea about this," she said. The
Washington Post reported in February that census officials in Texas earlier
this year rejected an FBI agent's demand for a census worker badge and
other identification in order to impersonate a census employee. Federal law
states that "whoever falsely assumes or pretends to be an officer or
employee acting under the authority of the United States or any department,
agency, or officer thereof, and acts as such, or in such pretended
character demands or obtains any money, paper, document, or thing of value,
shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or
both."
Census Bureau officials have yet to contact the Police Department about the
incident, Jordan said. He added that he is not aware of any other incidents
in which officers posed as census workers.
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