5 year investigation on whether cop said 'n*gger'

Tyrone N. Butts

APE Reporter
Word wasn't a slur, he says, but tape analyst insists it was

The Cincinnati police officer accused of using a racial slur five years ago insists he did not use the term.

Lt. Jeff Butler, publicly addressing the allegations Tuesday night for the first time, was adamant: "The term I used was 'doper.' D-O-P-E-R.''

In the swirl of controversy, everyone's forgotten, he said, that he worked at the time in the undercover drug unit, where "doper'' is common slang. The word was used at the end of a 1999 internal investigations interview.
t came to light in December during depositions in an unrelated lawsuit against the city.

Using the racial slur is "the height of ignorance,'' said Butler, a third-generation officer o
n t
he force 17 years. "I realize the environment we work in. And everyone deserves respect.''[/
b]

His comments came in response to Councilman Christopher Smitherman's announcement Tuesday that an Indianapolis firm he'd personally hired to enhance the audio concluded Butler did use the slur. A previous analysis by the University of Cincinnati was inconclusive, and the city's investigation continues.

Darren Sebring, the analyst at ISA Forensics who made the tape louder and slowed it down, said Butler does not say "dopers."

"It's definitely not doper," Sebring said. "You can tell that it's an N there.''

The findings also drew the first response yet from Keith Fangman, then the Fraternal Order of
Police president who was with Butler during the interview.

Fangman said he "can't make out'' what Butler said, but he's certain it wasn't a racial slur. All four
people in t
he room knew the interview was being taped, he said, and "you would have seen a visible reaction'' if anyone heard something so offensive.

ISA Forensics' Web site describes
the company as a computer services firm that recovers deleted files and removes background noise from audiotapes.

Smitherman said he sought the outside analysis because he felt the city had dropped the ball on the investigation. He said he gave a copy of Sebring's transcript to City Manager Valerie Lemmie.

How Butler used the word, he says, shows a philosophy of policing some communities differently, Smitherman said.

Not everything's about racism, he said. "But this is."

*****
The city government of Cincinnati has way too much money and time on t
heir hands. Instead of patroling the streets and keeping people safe from you know who, they have wasted FIVE years and countless thousands of dollars to find out if a cop said 'n-gger' five
years ago. n-gger
s call other n-ggers 'n-ggers' every Goddamned day. What are you going to do about that?


T.N.B.
 
This guy brought it upon himself for apologizing, thus showing weakness. Never apologize for using the word "niqqer" properly.
 
http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2004/03/10/loc_audio10.html

What happened to the 1st Amendment to the Constitution? Oh that's right, it doesn't apply to whites. :angry:

Policeman: I said 'doper'


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Word wasn't a slur, he says, but tape analyst insists it was

By Jane Prendergast
The Cincinnati Enquirer


The
incinnati police officer accused of using a racial slur five years ago insists he did not use the term.

Lt. Jeff Butler, publicly addressing the allegations Tuesday night for the first time, was adam
ant
: "The term I used was 'doper.' D-O-P-E-R.''

In the swirl of controversy, everyone's forgotten, he said, that he worked at the time in the undercover drug unit, where "doper'' is common slang. The word was used at the end of a 19
99 internal investigations interview. It came to light in December during depositions in an unrelated lawsuit against the city.

Using the racial slur is "the height of ignorance,'' said Butler, a third-generation officer on the force 17 years. "I realize the environment we work in. And everyone deserves respect.''

His comments came in response to Councilman Christopher Smitherman's announcement Tuesday that an Indianapolis firm he'd personally hired to enhance the audio concluded
Butler did use the slur. A previous analysis by the University of Cincinnati was inconclusive, and the city's investigation continues.

Darren Sebring, the analyst at ISA Forensics who made the
tape loud
er and slowed it down, said Butler does not say "dopers."

"It's definitely not doper," Sebring said. "You can tell that it's an N there.''

The findings also drew the first response yet from Keith Fangman, then the Fraternal Order of Police president who was with Butler during the interview.

nFangman said he "can't make out'' what Butler said, but he's certain it wasn't a racial slur. All four people in the room knew the interview was being taped, he said, and "you would have seen a visible reaction'' if anyone heard something so offensive.

ISA Forensics' Web site describes the company as a computer services firm that recovers deleted files and removes background noise from audiotapes
.

Smitherman said he sought the outside analysis because he felt the city had dropped the ball on the investigation. He said he gave a copy of Sebring's transcript to City Manager Valerie
Lemmie.

Ho
w Butler used the word, he says, shows a philosophy of policing some communities differently, Smitherman said.

Not everything's about racism, he said. "But this is."
 
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