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Police

A Seattle Cop Gets Fired for Bad Tweets Instead of His Terrible Conduct

An officer used an anonymous account to lash out at police protesters (and a Reason post). He was uncovered and fired.

Scott Shackford | 10.6.2022 1:45 PM

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Andrei Constantin's tweets | Illustration: Lex Villena
(Illustration: Lex Villena)

An officer with the Seattle Police Department has been fired, not for needlessly busting out the window of an occupied car, but for being an angry troll on social media.

KIRO 7 news reported Tuesday that Andrei Constantin was fired from the Seattle P.D. last month for Twitter posts that caused "great harm to the Department's relationship with the community."

Constantin, using an anonymous Twitter account with the handle of "Bruce Wayne," had been responding to tweets from police protesters and anybody he perceived as Antifa with angry reactions, insults, and support for police violence against protesters.

For instance, he responded to a tweet about police officers in L.A. driving through protesters with, "Awe you poor baby. Guess you'll need to see one of your counselors for one of the many mental problems you have. You victim you." A thread of Constantin's tweets collected by what appears to be an actual Antifa account can be found here.

And there's also a small Reason angle. Apparently, Constantin did not appreciate Billy Binion's post from June 2020, pointing out that a lot of unnecessary police encounters that go bad follow out of traffic stops and that maybe armed law enforcement officers shouldn't be how we handle traffic violations.

Constantin responded:

https://twitter.com/WhiteRoseAFA/status/1446552404107878402

"I welcome having unarmed agents of the state try to stop me for a traffic infraction. Then I can put my [middle finger emoji] out the window and keep driving knowing they have ZERO power of enforcement."

The Seattle Police Department caught wind of Constantin's atrocious social media habits. On Sept. 22, he was officially fired from the department. Constantin was very apologetic about his behavior and tried to blame it on the "pain and frustration" he felt from these protesters in 2020. But Police Chief Adrian Diaz determined that Constantin's behavior was "inexcusable" and noted some past disciplinary problems in his decision to fire Constantin.

It's worth emphasizing that Constantin's past problems didn't get him fired, but his social media trolling did. Perhaps relevant to Binion's post from 2020, Constantin was suspended in March for eight days for shattering a car's window with two people inside and then not reporting having done so to the department. According to a disciplinary report from the Seattle Office of Police Accountability, Constantin ran the plate of a car parked at a gas station (the report doesn't explain why) and noted it had been sold two years ago, but the title had not been transferred. As Constantin approached the car, the driver saw him, got into his car, shut the door, and rolled up the window. When Constantin told him to roll the window down, the man refused and started to drive away. Constantin struck the window with a "hard object" and shattered it.

When he reported the incident, Constantin did not disclose that he broke the car's window, instead treating it as a "refusal to stop." Yet he also did not pursue the car and didn't report any other illegal or suspicious behavior. It turns out that the driver did have a warrant for his arrest, but Constantin didn't know that at the time of the stop. He didn't tell his supervisors about breaking the window, but according to the report, fellow officers had heard him brag about it. His supervisors discovered what had happened when a fellow officer asked to switch beats because he didn't like working with Constantin.

There were a couple of other instances where his conduct had been disciplined, including a case where he went chasing after a stolen car, stopped the wrong vehicle, and detained the driver and passengers at gunpoint. Open Oversight, which maintains a database of reports about police officers, lists 10 Constantin incidents evaluated by the Office of Police Accountability.

Whether Constantin was as bad as his record suggests, what does appear to be true is that his dangerous and violent conduct received mild discipline, and Constantin wasn't fired until he publicly embarrassed the entire department on social media.

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NEXT: An Officer Hogtied and Tased an Autistic Child. Why Is He Still Allowed To Work as a Cop?

Scott Shackford is a policy research editor at Reason Foundation.

PoliceSeattlePolice AbuseProtestsGeorge FloydReasonTwitterMisconduct
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  1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    BTW I think I pointed this out some time ago, that it's easier to fire a cop for an off-color tweet than it is for murdering someone, because that's where society puts its priorities. And yes, that includes the police-reform minded progressives.

    1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

      Don't forget the unions. They are only good at PR of the old-fashioned variety; this new woke crap has them flummoxed.

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    2. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

      No mean tweets, and we mean it!

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  2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

    and Constantin wasn't fired until he publicly embarrassed the entire department on social media

    Which is why whistle-blowers and rats are forced out, fired, or murdered and nothing else happens. Can't have them embarrassing the department.

    1. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

      Maybe firing that jerk and all his aliases explains the sudden drop in masked sockpuppet stink bombers clogging Reason's website with National Socialist shrieking. Casual visitors recoil in shock when confronted with the eructations of coprophages. This is precisely what both halves of The Kleptocracy are happiest with, since it spares them the burden of explaining the desirability and wisdom of resorting to deadly coercion on every conceivable pretext.

  3. Naime Bond   3 years ago

    Sticks and stones will break my bones but words that upset snow flakes will destroy me. Of course you fire for 'moral turptitude' after he admits it and starts apologizing, vs fighting it out with him and some union lawyer over what is improper or 'terrible' police procedure. Adults know how to take the path of least resistence. Writer is clueless how it works in the real world.

    1. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

      If the guy had been hit by a semi I'd be glad he was dead, just as I'm glad he was fired by the colleagues most likely to be stalked and shot in randomized retaliation for that bad apple's fight-picking. Nor would many of us wear black for long if Putin, Trump and Biden were to suddenly whisk off into the arms of The Devil or Jesus. Those who live for the initiation of force won't be missed, irrespective of how or why they go.

  4. Longtobefree   3 years ago

    OK, the law vs. a "private company"

    Anyone surprised at which one gets a cop actually fired?

  5. John F. Carr   3 years ago

    We had an officer like that in Massachusetts. Unjustified shooting, no problem. Politically incorrect social media posts, that's a suspension.

    When a progressive DA was elected a couple years later she charged him with the shooting too, probably because of his bad attitude but maybe genuinely just because of the shooting. He has not yet gone to trial.

  6. Gaear Grimsrud   3 years ago

    Not sure I understand the point of the article. Is it good that he got fired for anonymous posts online? Is it cool because there's some Reason angle? Or should he be fired for breaking a window but not pursuing the occupants one of whom had an open warrant? Should he have chased the car and arrested the occupants who were obviously fleeing? Should he fired because he said mean things about Antifa rioters? So many questions. The whole thing seems too local to me Scott. Thanks for wasting our time.

    1. Agammamon   3 years ago

      "Andrei Constantin seems to believe that it's the gun that gives cops power, not the power of the state or consent of the governed. "

      Are these people serious?

      All laws are enforced through the death penalty - every one of them. No exceptions.

      Literally the only thing that give him power to enforce the law is that fucking gun.

      1. Davedave   3 years ago

        So countries where they don't have guns or the death penalty have zero compliance with the law? You're an idiot.

    2. sarcasmic   3 years ago (edited)

      He got fired for embarrassing the department. Not for complaints against him or his abuse of power or anything like that. That's all totally acceptable. He made the department look bad. That’s why he was fired. If he had uncovered corruption or something similarly acceptable he would have been fired for making the department look bad.

      That’s the point.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

        There are so many layers to this story, it's hard to enumerate them.

        What's fascinating is that potentially violent behavior, failure to report details of a stop-- or the stop itself, bungling incompetence doesn't offend the department. Making fun of Antifa does.

        Again, it tells us a LOT about where Seattle's priorities are.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          It ain't just Seattle. It's national police culture.

    3. Syntheholdrunk   3 years ago

      Agreed. Not a good article. I get it that Reason has a huge axe to grind against law enforcement, and not without cause, but articles like this feel more like anti-police propaganda. The examples of bad conduct cited aren’t particularly egregious and may not have constituted misconduct at all (e.g. detaining the wrong people, even at gunpoint, is understandable given the challenges associated with identifying suspects in a dynamic environment). So what this boils down to is an imperfect cop was fired for his political views. Personally, I find that more disturbing than any of the acts of alleged misconduct noted in the article.

    4. n00bdragon   3 years ago

      I think it's general exasperation that a cop behaving badly didn't have any consequences but saying dumb things on Twitter did.

  7. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    His supervisors discovered what had happened when a fellow officer asked to switch beats because he didn't like working with Constantin.

    Why didn't the Seattle PD make him a school resource officer?

  8. Davy C   3 years ago (edited)

    One of the violations:

    You made a number of comments that were derogatory concerning discernible personal characteristics. These included, among others… Political Ideology: Stating that you would unfollow a Twitter account because “I know you support ANTIFA and a closeted socialist.”

    That’s over the line, now? That, posted from an *anonymous* account, will help get you fired from a public body if they find out who you are?

    1. mad.casual   3 years ago

      That, posted from an *anonymous* account, will help get you fired from a public body if they find out who you are?

      Depends on the public body. If you're an agent of the Female Body Inspectors, SS, or Congress, you've probably got at least 15 yrs. and 2-3 promotions-worth of legs left on your career.

  9. Social Justice is neither   3 years ago

    Shack shilling for violent marxists yet again. I remember that time period where Seattle marxists violently annexed territory of the US and Reason cheered "peaceful protest" as the rebels murdered people in the street. I remember the eftist mayors declaring themselves one with the violent marxist mob destroying their cities and Reason cheered "peaceful protest". Yeah, I could see getting frustrated with scum like that surrounding me and dictating a policy of criminals first. That Scott sees all that as just fine says a lot about him.

    1. Davedave   3 years ago

      Nobody here is a marxist. Lots of neo-Nazis, no marxists. They have their own loony sites.

  10. OldNassau 2   3 years ago

    The officer's misbehavior reached the tipping point. Unless the author can find a police officer fired for only objectionable media postings (no previous or subsequent reprimands), Mr. Shackleford has no argument.

    1. Davedave   3 years ago

      The argument is that it's ridiculous he wasn't fired before, not that the social media posts are important. Obviously the relative triviality of what got him fired is interesting: the police clearly care more about their dubious reputation/PR than they do about officers who demonstrate they aren't fit to be police.

  11. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

    Um... did this same entity by any chance also go by Truthteller, Tdperk, Stack of Slugs, Mothers Lament, LongtoBeFree, bobby oshea, Corporatist Remover, Derp-o-matic, Gaear Grimsrud, MrBoz and Jimbojr?

    1. Joe Brandon   3 years ago

      GFY, Hank

  12. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

    You're getting a few months ahead of the program.

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