Current:Home > NewsHouston mayor says police chief is out amid probe into thousands of dropped cases -MarketLink
Houston mayor says police chief is out amid probe into thousands of dropped cases
View
Date:2025-04-11 19:12:20
HOUSTON (AP) — The mayor of Houston has accepted the retirement of the city’s police chief as the department investigates why thousands of cases including sexual assault crimes were dropped, a city spokesperson said Wednesday.
Mayor John Whitmire accepted the retirement of Police Chief Troy Finner, who is stepping away following reports Tuesday that he was aware of a code used to drop the cases, years before acknowledging its existence.
Whitmire appointed assistant Chief Larry Satterwhite as acting chief and will discuss the chief’s retirement during a City Council meeting Wednesday, according to spokesperson Mary Benton.
Finner’s retirement comes as police investigate the dropping of more 4,000 sexual assault cases that are among more than 264,000 incident reports never submitted for investigation due to staffing issues during the past eight years.
Finner, who joined the Houston police department in 1990 and became chief in 2021, announced the investigation in March after revealing that officers were assigning an internal code to the unsubmitted cases that cited a lack of personnel available.
Finner apologized at that point, saying he had ordered officers to stop in November 2021 after finding out for the first time that officers had been using the code to justify dropping cases. Despite this, he said, he learned on Feb. 7 of this year that it was still being used to dismiss a significant number of adult sexual assault cases.
On Tuesday, several Houston TV stations reported that Finner was included and responded to an email in 2018 referring to the suspended cases.
Finner posted a statement on X saying he did not remember that email until he was shown a copy of it on Tuesday. “I have always been truthful and have never set out to mislead anyone about anything,” Finner wrote.
“Even though the phrase ‘suspended lack of personnel’ was included in the 2018 email, there was nothing that alerted me to its existence as a code or how it was applied within the department,” Finner wrote.
veryGood! (62)
Related
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- At least 20 Syrian soldiers killed in ISIS bus ambush, activists say
- 3 men found dead in car outside Indianapolis elementary school
- Two witnesses to testify Tuesday before Georgia grand jury investigating Trump
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Mother arrested after 10-year-old found dead in garbage can at Illinois home, officials say
- Far-right populist emerges as biggest vote-getter in Argentina’s presidential primary voting
- ‘Nobody Needs to Know’ by Pidgeon Pagonis, August Wilson biography: 5 new must-read books
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- A woman says she fractured her ankle when she slipped on a piece of prosciutto; now she’s suing
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Ex-officers plead guilty to more charges after beating, sexual assault of Black men in Mississippi
- A history of Hawaii's sirens and the difference it could have made against Maui fires
- 3 Maryland vacationers killed and 3 more hurt in house fire in North Carolina’s Outer Banks
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Showcases Baby Bump in Garden Walk Selfie
- More states expect schools to keep trans girls off girls teams as K-12 classes resume
- The man shot inside a Maryland trampoline park has died, police say
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Small Kansas newspaper says co-owner, 98, collapsed and died after police raid
Social Security checks face $17,400 cut if program isn't shored up, study says
Shoji Tabuchi, National Fiddler Hall of Famer and 'King of Branson,' dies at 79
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Kansas newspaper says it investigated local police chief prior to newsroom raid
A former Georgia police chief is now teaching middle school
‘Old Enough’ is the ‘Big Bisexual Book’ of the summer. Here’s why bi representation matters.