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#Brian Buglio
malenipshadows · 3 years
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+ The charges came after the chief threatened to arrest the man for posting “critical” comments against the chief and his department on Facebook. According to court records, the chief has agreed to plead guilty and has also agreed to resign from the force. + According to a criminal information filed in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, the chief, Brian Buglio, 45, of Lattimer Mines, Pa., was employed by the West Hazleton Police Department. West Hazelton is about an hour south of Scranton. + The document says a person referred to only by the anonymous moniker Individual #1 “posted social media content on Facebook criticizing [Buglio] and the West Hazleton Police Department.”  + Here’s how the feds allege the matter unfolded:  On or about March 4, 2020, Individual #1 met with BRIAN BUGLIO at the West Hazleton Police Department, in accordance with BRIAN BUGLIO’s directions.  During that meeting, BRIAN BUGLIO, acting under color of law, threatened to pursue felony criminal charges against Individual #1, in retaliation for Individual #1’s social media posts on Facebook and to stifle Individual #1’s exercise of free speech.  During the meeting, BRIAN BUGLIO acknowledged that the threatened felony lacked merit. + Individual #1 “agreed to remove” the posts “and to refrain from creating additional social media posts critical” of the chief or the department, the
document goes on to say.The document suggests a regime of prior restraint — a constitutionally troubling accusation. Prosecutors allege specifically that Buglio violated 18 U.S.C. § 242.  + Scranton ABC affiliate WNEP identified Individual #1 as Paul Delorenzo of East Stroudsburg, Pa.  Delorenzo told the TV station he criticized the chief and the department for being “slow to make an arrest” in a case which involved him.  The TV station’s report says Delorenzo also “accused the chief of committing a violent crime.” + “He (Buglio) called me, left me a voicemail, and said that he was going to arrest me for a crime that was being investigated for something I’ve never even done or had any part of,” Delorenzo told the TV station. + In the report, Delorenzo then described how the chief allegedly threatened him.“  He goes, ‘Well, you like to post fake things and fake stories about me so, I could make up a fake arrest and put you in jail,' ” Delorenzo said. + Delorenzo said he agreed to take down the post, shook hands with the chief, and later called the FBI. + According to court records, the chief signed a plea agreement related to the case on April 22.  A defense attorney signed the document April 28. The timing of the plea agreement is interesting considering the charging document is dated May 27. Prosecutors signed the plea agreement on May 27 as well. + Negotiated pleas are not uncommon, however.“The defendant agrees to resign the defendant’s position as chief of the West Hazleton Police Department within 10 days of the entry of the plea pursuant to this Agreement,” the plea deal states, “if the defendant has not already resigned in advance of the entry of the plea.” + West Hazleton officials would not confirm Buglio’s employment status to WNEP.
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96thdayofrage · 3 years
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The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday charged a Pennsylvania police chief for allegedly violating a man’s civil rights. The charges came after the chief threatened to arrest the man for posting “critical” comments against the chief and his department on Facebook. According to court records, the chief has agreed to plead guilty and has also agreed to resign from the force.
According to a criminal information filed in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, the chief, Brian Buglio, 45, of Lattimer Mines, Pa., was employed by the West Hazleton Police Department. West Hazelton is about an hour south of Scranton.
The document says a person referred to only by the anonymous moniker Individual #1 “posted social media content on Facebook criticizing [Buglio] and the West Hazleton Police Department.” Here’s how the feds allege the matter unfolded:
On or about March 4, 2020, Individual #1 met with BRIAN BUGLIO at the West Hazleton Police Department, in accordance with BRIAN BUGLIO’s directions.  During that meeting, BRIAN BUGLIO, acting under color of law, threatened to pursue felony criminal charges against Individual #1, in retaliation for Individual #1’s social media posts on Facebook and to stifle Individual #1’s exercise of free speech.  During the meeting, BRIAN BUGLIO acknowledged that the threatened felony lacked merit.
Individual #1 “agreed to remove” the posts “and to refrain from creating additional social media posts critical” of the chief or the department, the document goes on to say.
The document suggests a regime of prior restraint — a constitutionally troubling accusation.
Prosecutors allege specifically that Buglio violated 18 U.S.C. § 242.
Scranton ABC affiliate WNEP identified Individual #1 as Paul Delorenzo of East Stroudsburg, Pa. He told the TV station he criticized the chief and the department for being “slow to make an arrest” in a case which involved him.  The TV station’s report says Delorenzo also “accused the chief of committing a violent crime.”
“He called me, left me a voicemail, and said that he was going to arrest me for a crime that was being investigated for something I’ve never even done or had any part of,” Delorenzo told the TV station.
In the report, Delorenzo then described how the chief allegedly threatened him.
“He goes, ‘Well, you like to post fake things and fake stories about me so, I could make up a fake arrest and put you in jail,'” Delorenzo said.
Delorenzo then said he agreed to take down the post, shook hands with the chief, and later called the FBI.
The charging document contains a similar description of the latter events.
“Individual #1 and BRIAN BUGLIO confirmed that they had a ‘deal’ and shook hands at the conclusion of the meeting,” the information states.
According to other court records, the chief signed a plea agreement related to the case on April 22. A defense attorney signed the document April 28. The timing of the plea agreement is interesting considering the charging document is dated May 27. Prosecutors signed the plea agreement on May 27 as well.
Negotiated pleas are not uncommon, however.
“The defendant agrees to resign the defendant’s position as Chief of the West Hazleton Police Department within 10 days of the entry of the plea pursuant to this Agreement,” the plea deal states, “if the defendant has not already resigned in advance of the entry of the plea.”
West Hazleton officials would not confirm Buglio’s employment status to WNEP.  However, they eventually told the Hazleton Standard Speaker that Buglio had, indeed, resigned from the force.
The maximum possible penalty for the offense is one year behind bars, one year of supervised release, and fine of up to $100,000. The DOJ said in a press release that it is unlikely the chief would serve anywhere close to that much time.
“At the time of sentencing, the United States will recommend that the Court impose no greater than the minimum term of imprisonment within the applicable Sentencing Guidelines range,” the plea agreement reads.
Local residents quoted by the TV station offered mixed opinions on the matter.  One person who said she went to school with the chief said he had the right to “stick[] up for himself.”  Another person said the chief didn’t have the authority to police speech.
Legally speaking, a hypothetically less troublesome course of action for the allegedly maligned chief probably would have been to file a civil defamation lawsuit against Individual #1 to address the allegation that the chief had committed a crime.  The chief almost certainly would have been legally required to prove actual malice because he is a public official.  Actual malice is a concept in defamation law which tests a defendant speaker’s attitude toward the truth, not whether the defendant speaker disliked the subject of his comments.  The standard creates an additional legal hurdle for public officials who believe they have been defamed.  Winning is rather difficult but not impossible — as a number of cases filed by police plaintiffs can attest.
Such lawsuits by police plaintiffs are controversial; the actual malice standard is designed to allow citizens broad leeway to criticize government actors under the First Amendment.  Anti-SLAPP laws in many states offer additional protection to defendants; however, Pennsylvania’s is narrow and appears not to hypothetically apply here.
It is unclear whether a difficult-to-win defamation case was contemplated in this matter.  A search of Pennsylvania civil actions in an online court database reveals no actions under Buglio’s name.  It is also unclear exactly what was said on Facebook or whether the comments were factually sufficient to support a defamation claim in the first place.
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bureauofstupidity · 3 years
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Feds Arrest Police Chief Who Threatened Facebook Poster
by John Peccavi June 11, 2021
Who hasn't thought, at one time or another, "Gee, wish I hadn't said that"? The tongue can be a potent Weapon of Self Destruction.
On March 4, 2020, Police Chief Brian Buglio's tongue went nuclear. But only later did he feel the blast.
Buglio had become upset when he saw a posting on Facebook which criticized him and his West Hazleton, Pennsylvania police department. So the chief decided to talk to the guy who had posted the criticism. News reports later identified the poster as Paul Delorenzo.
On March 4, Buglio met Delorenzo and threatened to have him arrested on bogus charges if he did not remove the critical material and promise not to post any more criticisms. Delorenzo agreed and they shook hands
Buglio must have felt pretty good at this point. Mission accomplished! Or was it?
Soon, agents from the FBI and Internal Revenue Service would be investigating the incident. They were part of a public corruption task force working out of the United States attorney's office. The task force also included people from the Pennsylvania state police and the Pennsylvania attorney general.
The feds charged Buglio with violating a law which Congress passed right after the Civil War to protect former slaves. The statute makes it illegal for anyone acting "under color of law" to deprive a person of federal civil rights. Buglio's threat deprived Delorenzo of his constitutional right to criticize government officials and therefore violated the law.
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If a time traveler could go back to 1866 and tell the congressman about this application of their new law, what would they say? Well, their first response likely would be "What's Facebook?" Their second question might be, "What's the Internet."
The statute has been, and remains, one of the most important laws Congress ever passed, protecting freedom in ways the legislators could not even have imagined. But any law depends on the willingness of officials to enforce it.
Buglio was a small fish in a small pond. His entire police force consisted of 9 officers, 4 of them part–time. Do federal officials have the guts to reel in bigger fish?
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In Tennessee, a man scanned an album cover showing two men urinating on a tombstone. He then Photoshopped the picture to add a photograph of a police officer who had been killed while on duty, and posted it online.
A local prosecutor involved the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which arrested the man on charges later dropped, but only after the man had spent 11 days in jail. The TBI director bragged about the arrest.
The arrested man sued, relying on another law which Congress passed right after the Civil War to protect former slaves. This law allows civil actions by private parties. That suit just began.
But will the feds bring criminal charges against these cops? It hasn't happened yet. Will it?
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briefnewschannel · 3 years
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PA Chief to Plead Guilty to Threatening Man with Felony Charges Over Facebook Posts - Command
PA Chief to Plead Guilty to Threatening Man with Felony Charges Over Facebook Posts – Command
Chief Brian Buglio of the West Hazleton Police Department has reported pleaded guilty to charges stemming from threatening a police critic with a felony arrest. (Photo: West Hazleton PD) A police chief in Pennsylvania who threatened a private citizen with felony charges in retaliation for critical Facebook comments has agreed to plead guilty to a charge of deprivation of civil rights, federal…
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harmcityherald · 3 years
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guncelkal · 3 years
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A Pennsylvania police chief who allegedly threatened to 'make up a fake arrest' in retaliation to Facebook posts got charged with a civil rights violation
A Pennsylvania police chief who allegedly threatened to ‘make up a fake arrest’ in retaliation to Facebook posts got charged with a civil rights violation
Summary List Placement A federal court charged a police chief with a civil rights violation after he allegedly told a man that he could “make up a fake arrest” and jail him. Brian Buglio, a 45-year-old police chief employed with the West Hazleton Police Department in Pennsylvania, “threatened a private citizen with criminal charges” in March, a press release from the Justice Department…
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libertyfreak2014 · 3 years
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leanpick · 3 years
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Police Chief Who Threatened Facebook Critic With False Arrest Pleads Guilty
Police Chief Who Threatened Facebook Critic With False Arrest Pleads Guilty
A police chief in Pennsylvania who threatened a critic with false arrest unless the person deleted Facebook posts attacking him has pleaded guilty to a federal civil rights violation. The chief, Brian Buglio of the West Hazleton, Pa., Police Department, made the threats in March 2020 to a private citizen, telling the person that he would pursue felony charges in retaliation for several social…
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newstrendingzone · 3 years
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Author: BY NEIL VIGDOR - Publish Date: June 2, 2021 at 09:45AM
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Brian Buglio, the police chief in West Hazleton, Pa., agreed to resign as part of a plea agreement, according to court records.
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longwindedbore · 3 years
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briefnewschannel · 3 years
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PA Chief to Plead Guilty to Threatening Man with Felony Charges Over Facebook Posts - Command
PA Chief to Plead Guilty to Threatening Man with Felony Charges Over Facebook Posts – Command
Chief Brian Buglio of the West Hazleton Police Department has reported pleaded guilty to charges stemming from threatening a police critic with a felony arrest. (Photo: West Hazleton PD) A police chief in Pennsylvania who threatened a private citizen with felony charges in retaliation for critical Facebook comments has agreed to plead guilty to a charge of deprivation of civil rights, federal…
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