HEATHER WYSOCKI
Cape Cod Times
Reprinted with Permission
BOURNE — His disciplinary hearing is over, but Bourne firefighter Richard Doherty will have to wait more than a month before finding out whether he will be punished or fired for behavior, including Facebook posting, that the town has deemed inappropriate.
On Thursday, both the town of Bourne and Doherty's attorney, Terence Coles, rested their cases in the three-day disciplinary hearing of the 16-year fire department veteran, Bourne Town Counsel Robert Troy said.
The town alleges Doherty violated several of the fire department's rules of professional conduct in posts on his private Facebook page, including some that make negative comments about the fire department, town and other Bourne residents.
But Coles said the hearing "just further reinforced the fact that the charges have nothing to do with any improper conduct by Mr. Doherty, and everything to do with the town's witch hunt against the (fire department) union."
On Thursday, the town also alleged that in addition to the Facebook comments, some of the photos posted on Doherty's page — including an image of a Confederate flag and another of a dog and a raccoon having sex — were inappropriate and, in the case of the flag, racist.
Doherty's lawyer said the Facebook posts should be out of the scope of the town's power to discipline.
The posts "either have nothing to do with the department ... or were cases where he was expressing his opinion of issues of public concern and shouldn't be the subject of discipline," Coles said.
It will take several weeks for certified copies of the disciplinary hearing minutes to be completed, Troy said. Then the hearing officer, attorney Charles Sabatt of Hyannis, will have 20 days after he receives the records to file his report, which will include recommendations of whether, and how, the town should punish Doherty.
Each side then has 10 days to file their opinions on the case, after which Bourne Town Administrator Thomas Guerino will make a final decision on whether to punish Doherty, Troy said, adding the process could take well over a month.
Doherty declined to comment about the proceedings.
Related
Firefighter Awaiting Decision on Discipline