» This Story:Read +| Comments

Fire Official Got No Special Treatment, Md. Report Says

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, August 9, 2009

Montgomery County police did not give favorable treatment to then-Assistant Fire Chief Gregory J. DeHaven when they decided against giving him a breathalyzer test after he caused a four-car accident, an internal police department report concludes.

This Story

Fire department tests later that evening found that DeHaven had a blood alcohol level twice the legal limit -- a result that he disputes.

The still-unfinished internal report, which the county police chief said he would not release publicly, concluded that the ranking police officers who converged on the scene of the Nov. 30 accident handled the case properly when a roadside sobriety test on DeHaven by a sergeant determined that he did not show signs of impairment. A rookie officer had previously said he smelled alcohol on DeHaven's breath. Police issued DeHaven a $130 ticket for failing to control his county sport-utility vehicle.

DeHaven, who was returning from honor guard duties at a Washington Redskins game, sideswiped a car, crashed into a police cruiser and then struck a vehicle that the police cruiser was stopping, police said.

DeHaven was allowed to leave the scene of the accident, which police said occurred about 8 p.m. at the Falls Road interchange on Interstate 270. He left with fellow fire department officials but did not show up immediately at the department's alcohol and drug testing site in nearby Rockville, confidential fire department documents show. As a result of the delay, DeHaven's blood was not tested until nearly 11 p.m., the records show.

Montgomery Police Chief J. Thomas Manger, whose internal affairs office examined police handling of the case, said he is confident that his department acted properly. He said the report is not finished because there are some small editing changes he plans to include in the report. But he said the conclusion, which he described to The Washington Post, would not change.

Officers at the scene concluded that DeHaven "wasn't likely impaired," Manger said. "I think for the police department, that was the biggest issue. Basically, the bottom line was, 'Did he get any special treatment?' And the bottom line answer is, 'No, he got no special treatment,' " Manger said.

One of the first officers on the scene, recent police academy graduate Kevin Correa, was quickly outranked by colleagues who joined him. "Correa was just taking orders. There was absolutely no wrongdoing on his part," Manger said.

Sgt. Ed Shropshire gave DeHaven an eye-tracking test, asking him to follow the movement of a pen, Manger said. Shropshire "felt that with what he saw, [DeHaven] wasn't impaired enough to go further."

Manger said the sergeant has a good reputation. "Shrop has got no reason to handle this any differently than the way it was handled."

Capt. Willie Parker-Loan also arrived on the scene. "If they thought he was drunk, Willie would have said, 'Lock him up,' " Manger said.

In an e-mail exchange Friday, Correa declined to comment. Shropshire and Parker-Loan could not be reached Friday.


CONTINUED     1        >


» This Story:Read +| Comments

More in the Maryland Section

Blog: Maryland Moment

Blog: Md. Politics

Washington Post staff writers provide breaking news coverage of your county and state government.

Local Explorer

Local Explorer

Use Local Explorer to learn about Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia communities.

Md. Congressional Primary

Election Results

Obama and McCain swept the region on February 12.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2009 The Washington Post Company