Albany Times Union

Ex-chief says mayor told him to lie

Legal claim filed against Rochester alleges defamation

- By Michael R. Sisak

Rochester’s former police chief alleges the city’s mayor pressured him to lie about her handling of the police killing of Daniel Prude, which was kept from the public for six months, and that she fired him because he refused to do so.

La’ron Singletary, terminated in September after announcing plans to retire, says in legal papers made public Wednesday that Mayor Lovely Warren urged him to omit facts and give false informatio­n to back her claim that it wasn’t until months later that she learned key details of the March 23 encounter that led to Prude’s death from suffocatio­n.

Singletary wrote in the papers — a notice of claim sent to the city as a precursor to a lawsuit — that Warren was especially worried that his testimony before a city council panel investigat­ing Prude’s death would undermine her repeated assertions that the then-chief hid informatio­n from her.

Singletary wrote that those assertions — made by Warren at news conference­s and in TV interviews after news of Prude’s death became public in September — were false, defamed his character and harmed his reputation as an upstanding law enforcemen­t official.

Warren said Singletary initially told her Prude’s death was a drug overdose.

Singletary wrote in his notice of claim that he texted her Prude was “likely high on PCP” but that he updated her with additional informatio­n on April 13 when the medical examiner ruled Prude’s death was a homicide.

A city spokespers­on, Bridgette Burch White, said in a statement that Rochester will “fully defend taxpayers against this frivolous suit.”

She added that Singletary’s version of events confirms Warren’s claim that the former chief never showed her body camera footage from the officers involved in Prude’s arrest and that she only saw it in August.

Burch White said that was “a fact that Mr. Singletary refused to acknowledg­e until now.”

Singletary’s notice of claim, sent to the city on Dec. 3, was included Tuesday as an exhibit in the city council’s petition seeking to enforce a subpoena for him to testify and provide documents for its investigat­ion into Prude’s death.

Singletary didn’t specify the monetary damages he’s seeking from the city, but he noted that his Sept. 14 firing cost him the lifetime health benefits he would have received had he been allowed to retire on Sept. 29.

Also Tuesday, the city’s public integrity office issued a report concluding that it found no ethical lapses in the way Warren or senior staff responded to Prude’s death. Another probe, opened in April by the office of state Attorney General Letitia James, is ongoing.

Prude’s death received no public attention until his family released police body camera video and written reports on Sept. 2 that they obtained through a public records request.

The video showed Prude handcuffed and naked with a spit hood over his head. An officer was shown pushing his face against the ground while another officer pressed a knee to his back.

The officers held him down for about two minutes until he stopped breathing. He was taken off life support and pronounced dead a week later.

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