ACLU of RI Settles False Arrest Suit of Woonsocket Man for $550,000
GoLocalProv News Team
ACLU of RI Settles False Arrest Suit of Woonsocket Man for $550,000
The City of Woonsocket has agreed to pay $550,000 to settle the case.
“While this settlement brings some measure of accountability over the unlawful actions taken by the police against Mr. Blackie, nothing will ever remove the deep distress and psychological pain he suffered and continues to suffer as a result of being arrested twice, criminally charged, incarcerated, and prosecuted for crimes he did not commit, including a felony. Mr. Blackie spent 31 days in prison —31 days of his life that he will never get back," said ACLU cooperating attorney Joshua Xavier.
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST
About Case
The lawsuit, filed last October in U.S. District Court against Woonsocket police officer Timothy Hammond and the City of Woonsocket, argued that a series of actions taken against Blackie violated his constitutional right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures, and constituted false arrest and imprisonment and malicious prosecution.
The suit was filed by ACLU of RI cooperating attorneys Xavier and Chloe Davis.
According to the ACLU, in August 2022, an apartment was broken into in Woonsocket. One of the residents, William Grover, told an investigating police officer that the individual who had entered the home was known to him as “Black.”
Later, officer Hammond met with Grover and asked multiple times if Mack Blackie was the perpetrator.
The ACLU continued:
Mr. Grover — who knew both “Black” and Blackie — explicitly stated it was not Blackie, a Liberian, and even described the differences in physical characteristics between the two men.
Officer Hammond then failed to schedule a promised photo line-up so Grover would be able to identify “Black.” Instead, Hammond falsely wrote in his witness statement that “Grover positively identified the suspect male as being Mack Blackie.” Additionally, he later falsely stated in his application for an arrest warrant that Grover told another Woonsocket police officer that Blackie broke into the apartment. Blackie was arrested soon after.
Despite presenting a medical condition requiring attention, Blackie was held overnight in custody, taken to court where he collapsed, and only then medically treated, resulting in his hospitalization for several days. A few months later, he was rearrested and charged with felony breaking and entering and with assault based on the August 2022 incident.
Because he was on probation at the time, Blackie was incarcerated for 18 days without bail as a probation violator. When bail was finally set, he could not afford the $100 cash required for release, resulting in his continued incarceration for an extra 13 days, until an employee of a non- profit organization where he volunteered posted the money for his bail.
In February 2023, at a pre-trial conference in the case, Grover saw Blackie in the courthouse hallway. Immediately, he realized the Woonsocket Police had arrested the wrong man, and he informed the prosecutor. The charges against Blackie were then dropped. While Hammond was later suspended for 10 days and demoted for “fail[ing] to follow standard investigative procedures,” he apparently remains on the force.
“I am grateful and thankful to God for making everything successful and am happy and glad justice has been done," said Blackie. "I am also thankful to the Rhode Island ACLU and my lawyer for making this case outcome possible and for helping and supporting me the whole time.”
