![]() ![]() The supervisor also said that what Theodore posted doesn’t tell the entire story. That resulted in not just negative comments but death threats to members of the police department and other town personnel, she said. She said it was necessary for her to issue a press release after completing her investigation because Theodore had sent the video to another YouTuber with nearly one million followers. “That’s definitely within his rights, and my officers executed their rights to be able to detain someone while they figured out whether or not this is the person they’re looking for or not.” Theodore exerted his rights to not give his name,” McGlasson said. McGlasson said Theodore was detained for roughly eight minutes until the officers could ascertain that he was not the individual they were looking for. Shortly afterward, an officer explained to Theodore that there had been multiple complaints about “someone entering properties, knocking on doors, opening windows. “What are you talking about?” he replied. “What were you doing in people’s yards, looking in their windows?” an officer in the video asked him. “This is incredible that this is happening in America,” Theodore told officers moments later. He then asks repeatedly why he is being detained before being placed in the back of a police car. On the video, while walking along Warwick Road, one of the officers gets out of a vehicle and asks Theodore to stop. Theodore, also a white male, was wearing what appeared to be a dark gray hoodie and blue jeans.Ī message left for Police Chief Kevin Owens was not returned. Less than three hours earlier, a nearby resident reported to Kent police that he saw a suspicious person in his home doorbell camera, who was described as a white male wearing a brown hoodie and gray pants. He started recording the officers’ actions when other units converged, he wrote. He tells me he’s going to follow me so I turn around and start walking home.” “He pulled up alongside me in an unmarked car and began questioning me without telling me he is a police officer. “There are no records of the Chief’s first contact with me,” he also stated. “I was walking around my neighborhood and was about 4 blocks from my home,” Theodore stated. He said he was handcuffed after refusing to identify himself to officers. On his YouTube posting, Theodore accused the officers of violating his rights for stopping him while he was taking a walk in his neighborhood, saying he was never told why he was being stopped and that police lacked the authority to detain him because there was no report of criminal activity in a call about a suspicious individual that morning. The video timestamp that appeared when Theodore was in a police car handcuffed was about 1:15 p.m. Theodore, who could not be reached for comment late last week by The Examiner, posted 12 minutes and 32 seconds of officer bodycam footage he obtained from the incident on YouTube on Apr. Theodore, I’d gone through all the radio traffic that we got that day, I went through all the pictures and that was my findings, that there was nothing,” McGlasson said last Friday, the day after her office issued a press release regarding the inquiry. “I did my own private investigation, and interviewed all the officers, I interviewed Mr. ![]() 18 incident that took place on Warwick Road after resident Ryan Theodore filed a formal complaint that he had been unlawfully questioned and detained. McGlasson said last week she investigated the Apr. ![]() ![]() Kent Supervisor Jaime McGlasson found no wrongdoing by several town police officers for briefly stopping and detaining a resident last month who mildly resembled the description of a subject following a rash of nearby thefts. ![]()
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