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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Policeman Is Reinstated - City Faulted For Firing Him
Title:US MA: Policeman Is Reinstated - City Faulted For Firing Him
Published On:2005-07-17
Source:Boston Globe (MA)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 00:02:18
POLICEMAN IS REINSTATED; CITY FAULTED FOR FIRING HIM

Had Admitted Drug Addiction

A police officer who was fired a year and a half ago after admitting
an addiction to painkillers has been reinstated to the Somerville
Police Department after the state's Civil Service Commission ruled
unanimously that the city should not have dismissed him.

Patrolman Alex Capobianco, who is a first cousin of Mayor Joseph A.
Curtatone, rejoined the force this month after he was fired in
December 2003 for several reasons, including his addiction to
OxyContin. He was the school resource officer at Somerville High
School at the time and had ingested OxyContin while on duty,
according to a city investigation that led to his firing.

The city has agreed to pay Capobianco nearly $90,000 in back pay, and
he has agreed to three random drug tests over the next year.

"He's a great guy, and it was an unfortunate set of circumstances,"
Capobianco's attorney, Douglas I. Louison, said last week in a
telephone interview. "He's very happy to be back at the job that he wanted."

The allegations came to light in June 2003 when Somerville police
investigated the case of a man who died of a drug overdose. Police
discovered a taped phone conversation in which a voice that police
believed to be Capobianco's was asking the man for 600 OxyContin
pills because he had a buyer, according to a transcript of the phone
conversation.

Capobianco said he did not remember having the conversation, but said
it could have been him, according to civil service documents.

Capobianco admitted to having an addiction to OxyContin and in July
2003 he checked himself into rehab, according to civil service
documents, but he denied ever selling drugs.

He developed the addiction after being prescribed the drug to relieve
back pain that he developed after being in a car accident while on
duty prior to September 2002, according to civil service documents.

After several hearings, the city fired Capobianco for his addiction
and his association with a drug dealer, according to civil service
documents. Capobianco declined to undergo a lie detector test, which
the city considered "insubordination."

Capobianco appealed the decision and in May, the Civil Service
Commission ruled that the city had not given Capobianco a fair
hearing. It also said that Capobianco was treated more harshly than
officers who had tested positive for using marijuana or cocaine and
were not fired.

The city decided not to appeal the decision. Curtatone recused
himself from the issue, leaving it up to Bruce Desmond, the president
of the Board of Aldermen. After consulting with city attorneys and
other members of the board, Desmond said he decided it would only
cost the city more money to fight an appeal.

"The civil service decision was very strong in supporting Capobianco
and very strong in condemning the city," Desmond said. "There was no
way in hell we were going to win that appeal.

"If there was something there, the district attorney's office or the
attorney general's office would have taken the case," he added. Both
offices looked into the issue, but neither pressed charges.

"In a circumstance like this, if I had evidence that a police officer
was out there trying to sell drugs as part of something, I definitely
would have appealed it because that's a travesty," Desmond said. "But
it didn't exist."

Desmond said he has received assurances from the police chief that
Capobianco would not be working in the schools. He probably will be
working as a rank-and-file patrolman, according to Police Chief
Robert Bradley. Capobianco returned to the payroll July 1 and is
scheduled to resume active duty this Wednesday, Bradley said.

The commission also says in its decision that former mayor Dorothy A.
Kelly Gay's firing of Capobianco "raises concerns of a politically
motivated decision."

On Thursday, however, Gay defended her decision, saying it had
"nothing to do with politics."

Curtatone had defeated Gay in the primary in September, and he went
on to win the general election in November. Capobianco, who worked on
his mayoral campaign, was fired the next month.

"The commission finds that the disparate treatment of [Capobianco] is
based on his political support and his relation to Joseph Curtatone,"
the 16-page decision says. Curtatone declined to comment on the case.

Over the past year and a half, Capobianco has dabbled in real estate.
He has married and has an 8-month-old child, Louison said.
Capobianco, a lifelong Somerville resident, did not respond to
requests for comment.
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