Is the Racist Highway Patrol Trooper at it Again?
Former Ohio trooper says boss
allowed racist jokes
January 28, 2009 15:05 EST
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- A former State Highway Patrol
trooper says his boss allowed another trooper to make racists jokes and
comments.
Former trooper Matt Johnson filed a lawsuit Tuesday,
accusing his supervisor of ignoring his complaints and setting out to fire
him.
The lawsuit also names trooper Eric Wlodarsky, who got
into trouble last year after taking part in a KKK-type costume prank.
Johnson is white. The lawsuit accuses Wlodarsky of
making racist comments about him because he has biracial relatives.
Wlodarsky was reinstated to his job in November after
initially being fired for taking a photo of another trooper who was wearing
a white cone, mask and cloth, on the day before Martin Luther King Day last
January.
A message seeking comment was left with the Ohio
Department of Public Safety, which also was named as a defendant.
To read about the Patrol's previous racist escapades
click here:
http://www.knarfoh.com/news_aricles/OHP/2_sandusky_ohp_troopers_discipli.htm
To read the Sandusky Editorial about the previous
incident click here:
http://www.knarfoh.com/phpbb3/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=5
Courtesy WTTE 28 Website
Highway Patrol faces new
allegation of racism
By John Seewer
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Ohio Highway Patrol,
embarrassed last year by troopers taking part in prank involving what looked
like a Ku Klux Klan outfit, faces new allegations of racist behavior.
Former trooper Matt Johnson accuses his old boss and
another trooper of making or allowing racist jokes, according to a lawsuit
filed yesterday in Ohio's Court of Claims in Columbus.
Johnson, who is white, accuses trooper Eric Wlodarsky
of making racist comments about him because his ex-wife was married to a
black man and because he has biracial relatives.
Johnson, who is seeking damages of more than $25,000,
alleges his former supervisor ignored his complaints about the comments and
then set out to fire him.
All three worked at the Highway Patrol Post in
Mansfield. Wlodarsky later transferred to the Sandusky post where he got
fired for taking part in a KKK-type costume prank.
A patrol investigation found that he took a photo of
another trooper who was wearing a white cone, mask and cloth, on the day
before Martin Luther King Day last January. He was reinstated in November
when an arbitrator ruled that the firing violated a union contract.
Johnson's lawsuit isn't related to the costume prank,
but it does dredge up new allegations of racist behavior within the patrol.
The Department of Public Safety, which oversees the
patrol and is also listed as a defendant in the lawsuit, had not been aware
of the filing, said Tom Hunter, a spokesman for the department. It is their
policy not to comment on pending lawsuits, he said.
The lawsuit said the racist comments began in 2006 and
occurred over several months. Johnson said that his boss, Lt. Michael
Vinson, once encouraged Wlodarsky to repeat a racist joke so that several
others at work could hear it.
Vinson later set out to fire Johnson after he
complained, the lawsuit said.
Johnson was fired in 2007 after he was accused of a
couple of minor infractions, said his attorney, Michael Crevling.
Crevling said Johnson's punishment was much more severe
than Wlodarsky faced.
Vinson said today that he was unaware of the lawsuit
and would not comment.
There was no telephone listing for Wlodarsky
Columbus Dispatch - January
29, 2009