In a day when the words “Catholic” and “priest” often conjure up negative thoughts I want to tell you a story about a man who saw injustice and took on an entire police department to try to set things right. He would be the first to tell you he didn’t do it alone.
Father James Manship leads the flock at the New Haven, Connecticut St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church. He had been ministering to this mostly Latino congregation for a short time when, in the summer of 2008, his congregants began telling him stories about rogue police officers who made their lives miserable.
Their tales of harassment, unwarranted traffic stops, needless arrests and beatings while in custody were mind boggling to this young priest, the nephew of a veteran State Police trooper.
“I had such reverence for my uncle, Sargent Robert Manship,” Father Jim told me. “Never would I ever think a police officer would lie,” or do the other things parishioners were telling him about.
Yet, after listening to tearful stories of almost daily intimidation at the hands of officers from the East Haven, Connecticut police department Father Jim believed.
“There were three business owners and four workers who stepped forward to say, ‘We can’t put up with this anymore,’” he said. “It was the sense that they were not standing alone, a sense that their parish was standing with them in the fight.”
They revealed stories of how their driver’s licenses were kept by police after random traffic stops, how they had been ripped from cars and beaten. One man was pepper-sprayed while prone in the back of a police car after he asked why he had been stopped. Latino shop owners along West Main Street complained that officers staked out their storefronts and harassed their customers – immigrants from Mexico, Ecuador and Peru. Business was drying up. Families were suffering.
The priest and church leaders, including Pastoral Council member Angel Fernandez-Chavero, began to devise a plan to make a record of these stories of harassment and racial profiling – dates, times, police officers’ names. They knew they would need a journal of events tucked under their arm for their day of reckoning with city officials. Father Manship got himself a video camera.
Before their plan was fully formulated, Fernandez told me, he got a call from the priest on the afternoon on February 19, 2009. “He told me, ‘Angel, I’m in jail.’ My heart dropped.” Fernandez quickly went to get his pastor who had been charged with disorderly conduct and interference with a police officer.
The police report, written by Officer David Cari, would prove to contain lies. Father Jim had not interfered. He had gotten a call from a parishioner urgently asking for help because police were back in their store harassing people again. The priest never gave it a second thought as he grabbed his camera and jumped in his car.
What police didn’t realize was that the store’s overhead surveillance camera captured all the action. (scroll down to see footage)
When Father Manship arrived he quietly stood in the back corner of the store and turned on his hand-held camera. The falsified police report claimed he “had withdrawn an unknown shiny silver object out of his coat pocket and cuffed the object with his hands in order to conceal (it) from police.” Officer Cari wrote that he felt “unsafe” so he made an arrest.
Cari’s lie was proven by his own words, captured on the priest’s camera. Twice the officer is seen looking directly at Father Jim asking, “Sir, what are you doing? Is there a reason that you have a camera on me?” The report would also claim the priest became unruly and shouted at officers but the overhead camera showed that was another lie as a docile Father Jim was seen being led out of the store in handcuffs.
An arrest for no good reason. An arrest that would spark outrage among the faithful and, ultimately, a federal investigation of the East Haven police department.
Fernandez-Chavero asked congregants at the next Sunday Mass to step forward if they had been victimized by police. Stunningly, more than 100 brave souls did. Another 100 or so quickly followed and with the help of professors and interns at nearby Yale University they gave sworn statements for a federal civil rights complaint.
Last month, after a Justice Department report found the department had engaged in years of “biased policing,” four officers were indicted and arrested on charges of obstruction of justice, excessive force, false arrest and conspiracy. Their Police Chief (who had been calling Father Jim’s superiors to try to get him re-assigned) was named as an unindicted co-conspirator and soon resigned.
More arrests are likely but Father Jim demurs when I tell him people are calling him a hero.
“I’ve taken no satisfaction in any of this,” he said. “I just feel sad. One man told me he felt ‘hunted.’ I had a 20 year old girl in here recently that still hasn’t gotten over her arrest and a teenager who saw his father beaten and is deathly afraid of police.”
Father Jim Manship believes if one person’s liberty is at risk so is all of ours. “But,” he said, his voice sounding optimistic, “The people were listened to and that is really important. The federal government listened and agreed this has to be stopped.”








{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }
Albuquerque Journal Reader Chad Joseph writes:
“If we could get one or two priests like Father Jim Manship in Albuquerque, perhaps the routine slaughter of unarmed, mentally-disabled persons at the hands of the Albuquerque Police Department would cease.
According to even insiders, the department’s motto was chosen tongue-in-cheek: “In Step With The Community” is code for Instep With The Community, instep, as in the part of the foot used to kick things like balls in sports. One can only dream. Thanks for the inspirational story! “
Albuquerque Journal Reader Silvio Dell’Angela writes:
“Diane
Great OpEd story today on how a citizens’ uprising led by a Priest said to the New Haven City leaders that enough is enough there and got the US DOJ in to come in and clean up that rogue police department and rid it of its co-conspirator/corrupt Police Chief.
As you know the situation is much worst here as many of us have documented to our City leaders. This included an extensive compilation of APD offenses over the years prepared by a dedicated PhD researcher Nicole Moreland for the Martin Luther King Jr. Task Force that was sent to the US DOJ. The ACLU also weighed in and is asking Senator Bingaman to demand the DOJ. One retired officer and many others believe Mayor Berry and Chief Schultz has been communicating directly with the DOJ directly in Washington DC and attempting to keep them from coming.
We all know that had you been allowed to do so, you would have closed your OpEd with the sentence, “The situation is even worst here and demands a DOJ investigation at the soonest possible time.”
Mr. Dell’Angela:
Thank you for your kind note. However, you should realize that while I am a native of Albuquerque and my crime and justice column runs in the ABQ Journal every week they ALSO run nationwide – via my syndication service, Creators Syndicate, out of Los Angeles.
While I will always consider ABQ my hometown I do not live in ABQ full time anymore.
Most importantly for you to know – your comment that, “We all know that had you been allowed to do so, you would have closed your OpEd with the sentence…..” is ill advised and mis-leading.
No one tells me what to write. The considered opinions expressed are merely my own.
I know you have dedicated your life to exposing what you see as corruption in the Albuquerque Police Department (and the silence of the local media about it) but please do not paint my work with your brush.
Thank you for writing. ~ DD
Facebook Friend Anthony Gusumano writes:
“That is only the tip of the ice berg ! I just retired from a police department ! And it is horrible to work with some of the idiots u have to wortk with ! They are all not like that, but many are ! keep up the good work !”
Facebook Friend Darryl DuPont writes;
“I am so glad you wrote this story. It seems there are so few voices left in journalism that tell stories of Injustice. As the Hispanic population rises you will see more stories like this. As a conflicted Catholic I am reassured hearing there are still some priests trying to do what is right.”
Twitter follower Shan I Am writes:
“@DiDimond Wasn’t that horrific! I had no idea such things happened! I love when someone does SOMETHING to help! Bravery. Amazing! If U do nothing, you are as guilty.”
Facebook Friend Pat Melchionno wrote:
“Wow, Father is a hero to have stepped up and had people journal the questionable arrests and harrassments! Great story again DD and thanks for bringing to light just another injustice in this unfair society!”
Creators Syndicate Web Site Reader demecra zydeem writes:
“Sooo sad, truly. But I love a happy ending! There are hero’s in our midst, God bless ‘em all.”