White swears Walsh knew of allegations

Boston Police Commissioner Dennis White at City Hall on the day he was sworn-into office, Feb. 1, 2021. Mayor’s Office photo by Jeremiah Robinson

Mayor Kim Janey said Tuesday that her office is reviewing video submitted by Boston Police Commissioner Dennis White’s family claiming he was the victim, not the aggressor, of domestic violence in his former marriage, but Janey suggested she still intended to “move in a new direction” after a hearing this week.

Also on Tuesday, in a piece of evidence that contradicts what former Mayor Martin Walsh has said on the subject, White said in a sworn video statement that he personally told Walsh that he was the subject of a restraining order from his ex-wife in the late 1990s.

“I mentioned that I had a restraining order put on me with false allegations I tried to shoot somebody,” White said, according to a Boston Globe account of the video. “He was very sympathetic to what was going on with me as I was about his past and how we had overcome some hurdles in our lives to move on.”

Walsh has denied prior knowledge of the allegations, despite White’s and former BPD Commissioner William Gross’s assertions that Walsh would have been briefed on White’s internal affairs file as part of any promotion process.

Janey’s office planned a hearing for Wednesday June 2 to consider whether to remove White, who was accused in 1999 of hitting and threatening to shoot his then-wife, who was also a police officer.

Over the weekend, White’s attorney asked Janey to consider video affidavits submitted by his daughter, Tiffany, and former sister-in-law claiming that it was his ex-wife who was abusive, not White, according to multiple reports. 

Janey, in an interview on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” on Tuesday, said her team was “looking at these videos as we speak” and said they would be considered as she decides whether to fire White.

“I’m not sure why this information was not captured in the investigation where folks had an ample opportunity to make their case there. Part of the concern was the lack of cooperation with the investigator and certainly that was also discovered throughout the police department,” Janey said, referencing the city-commissioned review of the allegations against White.

“We will make a determination based on all of the information. The purpose of this hearing, though, is to move in a new direction,” Janey continued.

The mayor repeatedly mentioned the “blue wall of silence” as something that needed to be broken down in the Boston Police Department. She also referenced the investigation’s finding that White struck a 19-year-old woman in 1993 “over a fight around $10.”

“What is clear is that we need to move our city forward. We need to move our police department forward,” Janey said, calling for new policies in the police department around domestic violence, sexual assault, and a process for vetting leadership.

If Janey does fire White, as expected, the mayor suggested that the search for a permanent replacement could take months and may not be concluded before the city elects a new mayor in November.

“I would imagine that this process would take months. Again, we do not want to find ourselves with a rushed process, with a process where individuals have not been fully vetted, so it is important that we take out time with a search committee,” she said.

Janey is one of six major candidates seeking to replace Walsh on a full-time basis, along with City Councillors Michelle Wu, Andrea Campbell and Annissa Essaibi George, state Rep. Jon Santiago and the city’s economic development chief John Barros.

White was appointed quickly by Walsh following Gross’s resignation, but worked as commissioner for two days before Walsh suspended him after the Globe inquired about past allegations of domestic violence contained in court records.

“I think everyone at this point acknowledges that the process that got us here in terms of making a quick appointment is not the process we want to continue,” Janey said. “We do need to take the time to have a search. Boston is a world class city, Boston deserves a national search, where the community is front and center in terms of being able to weigh in on what they’d like to see in a police commissioner.”

Janey sidestepped questions by host Jim Braude about whether she thought she had the authority as acting mayor to name a permanent police commissioner, or whether she could guarantee that a search would stretch beyond the election.

“I would make sure that our search committee, if this is the route we’re going, lays out a timeline and a process by which we will get there. But what I will say, and be very clear, is that we will not put forth a process that would be rushed and have a candidate or finalists who has not been fully vetted,” Janey said.

Wednesday’s hearing was scheduled for 9 a.m. and set to be closed, despite White’s attorney requesting that the proceeding be public.


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