Police chief who threatened Facebook critic with false arrest pleads guilty

Brian Buglio could face a $100,000 fine and up to a year in prison for threatening a private citizen with felony charges over Facebook posts criticising him and the police department

Neil Vigdor
Wednesday 02 June 2021 08:51 EDT
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Brian Buglio, chief of the West Hazleton Police Department, pleaded guilty to one count of deprivation of civil rights under colour of law and agreed to resign within 10 days.
Brian Buglio, chief of the West Hazleton Police Department, pleaded guilty to one count of deprivation of civil rights under colour of law and agreed to resign within 10 days. (Getty Images)

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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 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 media posts that were directed at him and the police, authorities said.

The person agreed at the time to remove the posts from Facebook and to refrain from making future comments about Buglio and the police, according to a criminal complaint that was filed onThursday in federal court in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

“During the meeting, Brian Buglio acknowledged that the threatened felony charges lacked merit,” federal prosecutors said in the criminal complaint, adding that Buglio and the person had shaken hands over the “deal”.

Buglio, 45, of Lattimer Mines, Pennsylvania, pleaded guilty Friday to one count of deprivation of civil rights under colour of law and agreed to resign within 10 days of entering into the plea agreement, according to a copy of that agreement.

A lawyer for Buglio did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday night.

Federal prosecutors said that the FBI’s public corruption task force had investigated the case.

Authorities did not identify the person the chief threatened to have arrested, but the television station WNEP reported that it was a man who lives in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. Efforts to reach him on Tuesday night were not successful.

The station reported that the man had said the chief told him that since he liked to post fake stories, he could make up a fake arrest.

Buglio’s current employment status was not immediately clear.

The mayor of West Hazleton, a borough of fewer than 5,000 people about 45 minutes southwest of Scranton, did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday night. A person who answered the phone at the home of the borough manager hung up when contacted Tuesday night.

Buglio could face up to a year in prison and a $100,000 (£71,000) fine, according to the plea agreement.

According to the borough’s website, the West Hazleton Police Department has four full-time and four part-time police officers. Buglio has been employed by the Police Department since 1996 and became a police officer in 1995, the website says.

The New York Times

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