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Police

Nine Years Paid Vacation for New Jersey Cop Accused of Sexually Assaulting Inmate

The city has spent nearly $2 million on leave pay plus legal costs.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 6.29.2016 11:00 AM

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Large image on homepages | Paterson Police Department/Facebook
(Paterson Police Department/Facebook)
Paterson Police Department/Facebook

Who says police departments always move swiftly to protect their own? Sometimes it takes them almost nine years to find a fellow officer not guilty. Such is the case with Manuel Avila, a Paterson, New Jersey, cop who was accused of sexual assault in 2007. A local woman claimed that Avila had forced her to perform oral sex on him while she was in police custody.

A few days before the alleged assault, a city psychiatrist had ruled Avila unfit to carry a weapon and recommended that he retire. Instead, police officials decided to reassign him for six months to a duty that didn't involve carrying a weapon, at which point he would reach 20 years of service—a pension milestone. Avila was assigned to monitor municipal holding cells.

Avila was acquitted of criminal charges related to the alleged assault in 2010. The city settled a civil lawsuit with his accuser in 2011, agreeing to pay her $710,000. But somehow, the police department's internal investigation persisted through early 2016.

Throughout this time, Avila was on paid leave from the Paterson Police Department. By the end of his nine years on suspension, Avila had collected about $900,000 in income for doing nothing. With Avila's pay, the settlement with his accuser, and legal fees, the city has spent about $1.9 million on this case.

Perhaps Avila is innocent, but how could it possibly have taken the city nine years to determine this? "Why this took so long is beyond my control," Mayor Joey Torres told the Paterson Press. "Definitely, this should have been settled long ago. I'm just glad we're bringing it to closure."

All disciplinary charges against Avila were dropped in February, according to a records request filed by Paterson Press. The city and Avila signed a settlement agreement under which Avila will retire, receive around $85,000 in "accrued money owed" for things like vacation and sick days, and may be eligible for lifetime medical benefits and pension payments.

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NEXT: Californians Will Decide Whether to Legalize Cannabis This Fall

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

PolicePolice AbuseLawsuitsCorruptionRapeJailSex CrimesPaid LeaveNew JerseyCriminal Justice
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  1. Juvenile Bluster   9 years ago

    I mean, it was already clear that rape is legal for cops. This is nothing new, unfortunately.

    1. mad.casual   9 years ago

      pay her $710,000

      Technically, it was prostitution.

      1. WTF   9 years ago

        That's an expensive blow job.

        1. mad.casual   9 years ago

          You don't pay the her for the sex, you pay her to leave quietly.

        2. straffinrun   9 years ago

          For sucking a cop's dick? No, I'd say they got a bargain.

      2. Cynical Asshole   9 years ago

        Technically, it was prostitution.

        I'm actually kind of surprised they didn't go arrest her for prostitution. Maybe we shouldn't give them ideas.

  2. Krapulent Kristen   9 years ago

    It's good to be the king

  3. The Fusionist   9 years ago

    All I can say is, he *better* be innocent, after all that.

    1. The Fusionist   9 years ago

      But now that they're claiming he's innocent, let's investigate why they gave a $710,000 payoff to reward someone for (according to their version) lying.

      I'm sure the cop would *welcome* an investigation on why the taxpayers had to pay off a false accuser, right?

      I mean, the cop has nothing to lose from such an investigation, it will simply confirm how gullible all those clueless civilians are.

      I mean, the cop union is probably going to leap at the chance to get to the very bottom of this scandal..

      Right? Right?

      1. mad.casual   9 years ago

        I'm sure the cop would *welcome* an investigation on why the taxpayers had to pay off a false accuser, right?

        That was kinda my point. They rather blatantly turned a rape into prostitution and everybody brushes the dust off themselves, shakes hands, and walks off into the sunset.

        I can't believe there's not a State AG or DA reading the story and not at least saying, 'Huh?!'

        1. The Fusionist   9 years ago

          I don't know about NJ prostitution law, but I expect the statute of limitations is less than 9 years.

          1. mad.casual   9 years ago

            Right but, kinda as you were saying, colluding to effectively pay off a victim/witness has a lot more implications than just the statute of limitations.

            1. The Fusionist   9 years ago

              If that's what happened.

              The other possibility is that they paid her off because she was in fact victimized.

              I really can't say which it is.

              Either way someone got raped, either the woman or the taxpayers.

              1. Wizard4169   9 years ago

                Guilty or innocent, the taxpayers got raped long, hard and deep.

  4. WTF   9 years ago

    He went home safely after his shift. It's all that matters.

  5. tarran   9 years ago

    Remember when that lying fuckwad Dunphy claimed that paid leave for cops suspected of crimes didn't exist?

    Not only a murder apologist but a liar. Tsk, tsk.

    1. straffinrun   9 years ago

      Technically, he was right. Not paid. Stolen.

  6. Free Market Socialist $park?   9 years ago

    Blah blah punish cops something something Somalia, Wild West, anarchy blah blah, etc.

  7. Tony   9 years ago

    A million bucks for doing nothing as punishment for a blowjob. It's good to be a cop.

    1. commodious   9 years ago

      Disband, privatize, and compete.

    2. BYODB   9 years ago

      Clearly, everyone should join the force. Just make sure to get more questions wrong on their tests than you think you should. If you're too smart, well, you're out.

      This fact, on it's own, is one of the things that seriously should make everyone sit up and take notice. You literally are not allowed to be a 'normal' cop unless you have been proven to be stupid. I hate to insult an entire profession, but it is what it is in this case. What other job puts a cap on the I.Q. of applicants?

      1. Jay Dubya   9 years ago

        for Miami PD the cap was 110 the last I checked (about 10 years ago)

        1. Jay Dubya   9 years ago

          MPD's psych eval also checked for symptoms of antisocial personality disorder - as a *requirement*. the justification for this was that APD traits were required for police involved in assaults, etc (the criteria was for *all* officers, not just SWAT, though)

      2. frankania   9 years ago

        Back in the 60's I had a friend who applied for a job as INFORMATION OPERATOR with bell telephone co. She said she failed to get the job, because her IQ was too high.
        Now, scientifically speaking, maybe the company was right; too-intelligent people would get too BORED giving out phone numbers 8 hours a day and either quit or do a bad job!

  8. AugustaRosales   9 years ago

    I quit my 9 to 5 job and now I am getting paid 100usd hourly. How? I work-over internet! My old work was making me miserable, so I was forced to try-something NEW. After two years, I can say my life is changed-completely for the better! Learn More From This Site..

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  9. Crusty Juggler   9 years ago

    I am just glad this hero was allowed to get his pension.

    1. R C Dean   9 years ago

      I'll bet you anything its a spiked pension, too. He's probably got a six figure income for the rest of his life (or until the pension fund goes bust, whichever comes first).

  10. The Late P Brooks   9 years ago

    DUE PROCESS

    hth

    smooches, losers.

  11. dantheserene   9 years ago

    Hot damn, it is good to be a gangster.

  12. scape   9 years ago

    Free sex, no 2nd amendment infringements, unbelievable benefits, I can shoot anyone that pisses me off and kill dogs by the dozen. Where do I sign?

    1. Doctor Whom   9 years ago

      I was thinking the same thing. Why, oh why am I burdened with a conscience?

  13. IWasADemocrat   9 years ago

    Meanwhile ..

    Patterson, NJ:
    Population: around 150k
    Median household income: around $40k/yr

  14. invisible finger   9 years ago

    Nine Years Paid Vacation for New Jersey Cop Accused of Sexually Assaulting Inmate

    Great, now half the police are going to try to beat this record.

    1. dschwar   9 years ago

      I can't believe these euphemisms.

  15. retiredfire   9 years ago

    This is stupid.
    The cop was found not guilty.
    The Officer's union wasn't involved, except to, maybe, ensure the officer got his due process.
    The "police department" doesn't litigate civil suits or give out settlements - that is the City of Patterson, who dragged out this situation for these nine years.
    This could have been any municipal employee, nothing specific to a LEO, except, maybe the circumstance the woman found herself in. His Hispanic surname, probably had more to do with the kind of treatment he got than the fact he was a cop.
    All of your cop-hate is misdirected, AGAIN, on this one.
    REASON needs to grow up about what law enforcement is all about.

    1. Governor Squid   9 years ago

      Your first three words make a lot of sense, but it goes crashing down quickly after that. Are you getting $710,000 for this, or are you just throwing this one to your brothers in blue as a freebie?

  16. DenverJ   9 years ago

    Retired, you're pretty good on most subjects, but you have a large blind spot when it comes to cops.

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