Sky Obscured with Haze
59°
Crystal Lake, IL
Sky Obscured with Haze|Forecast »

CL officer suspended for neglect
 of protocol

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

CRYSTAL LAKE – A Crystal Lake police officer was suspended for what the department’s chief said was failure to follow protocol in an incident involving District 47 Superintendent Donn Mendoza.

Officer Brian Burr, who has been with the department since 1997, was given a three-day, unpaid suspension. Police Chief Dave Linder said Burr did not follow department procedure when he responded to a call involving Mendoza early in the morning of Sept. 9.

According to a police report written more than a week after the incident, police were called to Autumn Drive about 2:30 a.m. Sept. 9 after a neighbor reported a suspicious vehicle parked outside a residence. Burr responded and found Mendoza sitting in the back seat of his Honda Pilot. He was parked seven houses from his home, and Burr said Mendoza smelled of alcohol and appeared to be intoxicated, according to the report.

Burr never gave Mendoza a field sobriety test, Linder said. Mendoza later told the Northwest Herald that he was not intoxicated.

Burr gave Mendoza a ride home and did not, as he should have, search him before allowing Mendoza into the squad car, Linder said.

Once Mendoza was home, Burr returned to Mendoza’s car and drove it home, Linder said. For insurance and liability purposes, that is outside department protocol.

When contacted by the Northwest Herald on Sept. 17, Linder said he was unaware of the incident, but conducted an internal investigation that led to Burr’s three-day suspension.

Burr opted for the department’s educational disciplinary initiative that shaved two days from his leave upon successful completion of the program, Linder said.

“Our officer screwed up, and I’m not happy about it,” Linder said. “His general intent was to do the right thing, but it wasn’t the right thing.”

Burr and Mendoza don’t socialize, Mendoza said, but went to high school together.

Mendoza has not been charged with any wrongdoing nor will he be. On the advice of the city attorney, there is not probable cause to bring charges against Mendoza because there were no field sobriety tests given at the time.

Burr didn’t think there was enough to process a DUI charge that morning because Mendoza’s keys were not in the vehicle’s ignition, Linder said. Police department protocol prohibits Burr from speaking to the media.

Previous Page|1|||

Reader Poll

Which gaming system do you own?

Xbox
Wii
PlayStation
other
more than one