Tuesday, October
01, 2002
Lawsuit filed
vs. police, Enquirer
By Marie McCain mmccain@neuqirer.com
The Cincinnati
Enquirer
A former
Cincinnati police officer and his family say they were libeled
by The Cincinnati Enquirer and Cincinnati Police Department in
a story Saturday.
They seek $10 million in
damages in a lawsuit filed Monday in Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court by attorney Kenneth Lawson.
The lawsuit accuses the
newspaper of incorrectly identifying Deangelo Williams, a
South Fairmount man arrested Thursday, as the son of Clarence
D. Williams III, a former Cincinnati police officer and past
president of the Sentinels, a black officers organization.
The identification was included
in a story written by reporter Jane Prendergast, who also is
named in the suit - along with unidentified city police
officers who gave Prendergast the information purported to be
fact, the lawsuit says.
The lawsuit says Deangelo
Williams, 24, is not the son of the elder Mr. Williams, who
now works as a police chief in Florida.
It accuses the newspaper of
actual malice and contends it is working with police
department employees to subvert Issue 5, an amendment to the
city charter that allows city officials to conduct nationwide
searches for Cincinnati's police and fire chiefs and other top
officials. Issue 5 was passed by voters last November.
These individuals, along with
Chief of Police Thomas Streicher, are against Issue 5 and they
do not want to see African-American officers rise to the level
of assistant chief or chief of police for the city of
Cincinnati, the lawsuit alleges.
It also states Clarence
Williams III, now police chief for Riviera Beach, Fla., would
be an excellent candidate to take the place of Lt. Col. Ron
Twitty as an assistant police chief.
Col. Twitty is in the process
of retiring after he was found guilty Sept. 10 of attempting
to obstruct official business, a misdemeanor, in a case that
involved damage to his city-owned vehicle.
The suit also accuses the
newspaper of a custom and policy of presenting
African-American males in a negative light.
The plaintiffs are Clarence D.
Williams III; his son, Clarence D. Williams IV; Carolyn
Williams, a Cincinnati police sergeant and the mother of
Clarence Williams IV; and Evelyn J. Williams, grandmother of
Clarence Williams IV.
Enquirer Publisher and
President Harry M. Whipple said the newspaper has received the
lawsuit. We will respond accordingly, he said.
Cincinnati police spokesman Lt.
Kurt Byrd referred comments to the city's legal department.
We are not aware of the facts behind the suit, he said.
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