Hampton Roads, VA - 11/08/2009
Clear52°Clear
Forecasts | Doppler Radar
Traffic Cameras & VDOT Alerts

Portsmouth's interim police chief resigns after three months

Posted to: News Portsmouth


PORTSMOUTH

The city's interim police chief cited having to compete with the sheriff's office for law-enforcement resources as a key reason for resigning Monday, effective Sept. 1.

William Corvello, a retired Virginia State Police superintendent and interim chief previously in Newport News and Portsmouth, will leave after less than four months on the job, continuing the rapid turnover at the top of the city's Police Department.

His announcement shocked officers and community leaders, who praised his leadership and openness and bitterly lamented his departure.

"I am deeply disturbed that we have lost a person of Chief Corvello's caliber," Commonwealth's Attorney Earle C. Mobley said.

"Never has the working relationship between the Police Department and the commonwealth's attorney's office been better... There is something inherently wrong with the way the city deals with our police chiefs. In fact, I am now going to be working with my eighth chief in 6-1/2 years."

In his resignation letter to City Manager Kenneth Chandler, Corvello wrote that the law establishes police as the primary law-enforcers of a city. Funding patrols by the sheriff's office led to "the unhealthy state of the two departments competing for funds during each budget cycle," he wrote. "I would emphasize that the Police Department cannot compete with the political ramifications of this."

Mobley said it makes no sense for police and deputies to have "overlapping" functions.

"Our police department is unable to conduct investigations and police the streets due to inadequate funding, yet the sheriff's department is supplemented by the city to do police work. The primary function of the sheriff's department in Portsmouth is court security, service of process and maintaining the jail."

Councilman Steve Heretick said Corvello's letter was the first time he learned of Corvello's concern about Sheriff Bill Watson's community enforcement unit, which patrols neighborhoods. While the City Council approved the appropriation for the unit, it's funded entirely through the sheriff's revenue sources, not from the city's general fund or the police budget, Heretick said.

He added that residents in the neighborhoods where the unit has operated - Cradock, Park View and Cavalier Manor - seem to like it.

Corvello also wrote that City Attorney Tim Oksman had asked Garrett Shelton, interim assistant chief, to survey department members about issues surrounding a gate built in Sandie Point. Corvello complained that the city attorney hadn't gone through him and that he already had submitted a report on the issue to the city manager.

Corvello surprised police officials by reading his letter at a Monday morning meeting before leaving without comment, and informed the rest of the department in an e-mail.

"We're all shocked," said Detective Jan Westerbeck, a department spokeswoman.

The city manager's office Monday couldn't provide the terms of Corvello's contract or the status of the search for a permanent chief to head a department with 260 positions and a $32.4 million budget.

Corvello assumed command in May at age 76, a day after the sudden resignation of embattled Chief Edward Long after less than three years.

Officer Jason Knorowski, president of the statewide and local chapter of the Police Benevolent Association, cited Corvello's quick clearing of a backlog of discipline investigations. "When he came back here, morale increased significantly," Knorowski said.

"I haven't seen long faces like this since about the middle of Chief Long's tenure," said Jim Swan, president of the local Fraternal Order of Police.

"I think it is a huge loss for Portsmouth," said Anne Galvin Bremer, public safety coordinator of the Shea Terrace Civic League. "And I think that the constant turnover of police chiefs has been a detriment to the morale of the department."

Barbara Early of the Olde Towne Civic League said in an e-mail that she wished the city would "get it together and get at least the basics" such as a strong police chief to more effectively fight crime. "There are a lot of good people here trying to make a difference," she said. "But that will only happen when we get stable leadership in our high-profile positions."

City leaders expressed surprise Monday at Corvello's concerns.

"I'm at a complete loss, and I am not pleased," Heretick said.

Corvello was brought in to iron out organizational and management issues that have plagued the Police Department, Heretick said. Councilwoman Elizabeth Psimas said Corvello had sought a realignment of personnel that the city manager wouldn't allow.

"Council was very pleased with him," Vice Mayor Bill Moody Jr. said. "I'm very disappointed to hear" he's leaving.

Phone messages to Chandler, Oksman and Watson weren't returned Monday.

 

Pilot writer Janie Bryant contributed to this report.

Matthew Bowers, (757) 222-3893, matthew.bowers@pilotonline.com

Jen McCaffery, (757) 446-2627, jen.mccaffery@pilotonline.com



ADVISORY: Users are solely responsible for opinions they post here and for following agreed-upon rules of civility. Comments do not reflect the views of The Virginian-Pilot or its Web sites. Comments are automatically checked for inappropriate language, but readers might find some comments offensive or inaccurate. If you believe a comment violates our rules, click the "Report Violation" link below the comment.

Whooptee

I'm DEAD serious. I live in Cradock and am a member of the Neighborhood Watch. I know what Watson, Cherry, Johnson have done and know what others have NOT done.

"Unintelligent"? Hardly.

Name-calling and posturing don't change the facts. Visit a Watch meeting in Cradock and see who makes excuses for being out of town, ill, or in court. It's not the Sheriff's team. They see their job to fruition.

Are you serious?

Lee Cherry for Chief? Bill Watson for Chief? Sheriff's Office cleaned up Cradock? You guys are funny and very uninformed! Bill Watson is a great Sheriff I agree. Lee Cherry is a great Deputy, again I agree. The Sheriff's Office HELPED to get Cradock where it is today, that I would agree too. No one will be a good Chief of Police until the city manager and council lets the Chief they appoint be the Chief... but they won't! It would not matter who you make Chief, your City Manager and Council will not let them do their job, this should be apparent by now! The reason Sheriff Watson is a good Sheriff is because he is an elected official and the city can't stop him or tell him what to do. The Sheriff's office helped the Police Department (including but not limited to) Officer Baker and the Police Department's Neighborhood Strike Team to clean up Cradock, check your stats, ask someone and do some research before you post, otherwise you just sound unintelligent!

LEE CHERRY FOR POLICE CHEIF

I want to start by saying thank-you to the sheriffs dept. they have Made CRADOCK a great place to live again.The person that needs to be police cheif is Lee Cherry of the sheriffs dept he and Bill Watson will make the streets of Portsmouth Safe All this bull crap of fighting for money boy the police dept here is the most underpaid in the area Holley all he is worried about is spending billions of dollars on the hotel in victory crossing and wasting money in the common area of downtown we need a new mayor that know's where to spend money and what is best for Portsmouth. And the sheriff needs to keep up the good work of cleaning up the streets of Portsmouth someone needs to do it
Again LEE CHERRY for police cheif

I'd love to see

the Sheriff appointed as the Chief of Police! He has creative ideas about using resources to get a very important job done. He's not afraid to express himself nor does he kowtow to politicians. Watson is a confident law-enforcement officer. I'd be proud to have him as the permanent Police Chief of Portsmouth! Where do I sign??

Chief leaving

I hear a great deal of compliments for all the Sheriff's Office is doing here along with the complaints, but I don't hear the same for the Police Department. While I would love to see both departments working well together, perhaps some of the local government control issues are holding the Police Department back. Maybe it takes a politician (the Sheriff) to be able to overcome this. Whoever can do it, just keep Portsmouth safe!

Portsmouth's version of the

Portsmouth's version of the dictionary's meanings:

Chief of Police –noun- a person who, regardless of actual attitude, always expresses agreement with his or her supervisor (City Manager) or will be forced to resign, superior, etc.; sycophant.
City Council -adjective- of no use; not serving the purpose or any purpose; unavailing or futile, without useful qualities; of no practical good.
City Manager –noun- the one Supreme Being, the creator and ruler of the universe.
Mayor –noun- A person who possesses hatred or intolerance of another race or other races and of mild mental illness having a mental age of from 7 to 12 years and generally having communication and social skills enabling some degree of academic or vocational education.

Since we're talking about experience and training....

Can anyone tell me since when is it legal for a deputy escorting a funeral on a m/c to ride on top of the broken white divider line between the 2 lanes of westbound traffic on Portsmouth Blvd. with only emergency lights flashing, no siren, just to get to an intersection? Or how about jack-rabbiting from stoplight to stoplight at 60+ mph and not initiating the siren until almost at the next intersection? Obviously the deputies escorting the funerals don't know that while doing these ILLEGAL manuevers (which I have seen time and time again!) they relinquish their right of way and if they're involved in an accident THEY ARE AT FAULT AND LIABLE. The same goes with search and seizure laws. I am all for additional manpower on the street "getting it done" but there are rules and laws of evidence and search and seizure that have to be followed and if you don't know what you're doing and are doing it wrong it m

The Sheriffs patrolling in

The Sheriffs patrolling in Craddock and Cavalier Manor is kind of like community policing. They probably know half of the residents of those neighborhoods from their time spent in the courts and the jail.

I think having a presence in those neighborhoods is good, but competing for money with the police dept to patrol is not good.

Chief Corvello

The sheriffs department is trying to do a good thing but are seriously undertrained. As an officer in Portsmouth, I have seen this first hand. This is not to put anyone down but they need more search and seizure and patrol tactics training. I have seen citizens having their 4th Amendment Rights violated and had to act immediately to stop it. For the citizens who state, "I don't care as long as someone is cleaning up the streets", let me hear that once they stop and search you without justification. We have laws and we must, even if it helps the criminal element, follow them. They don't complete a thorough Field Training Program or even train on their motorcycles. Come on Watson, one deputy has died and 2 hurt as a result of you not allowing them to train regularly? Why? As for the Chief, happy retirement and we think the world of you.

I don't care who gets it done....

just GET IT DONE!

This whole discussion about competition between the Police Department and Sheriff's department is absurd! Crime is crime and we're sick of it. If the Sheriff is accomplishing the job, criminals are being put behind bars. The neighborhood NIOs should spend less time socialing in the neighborhood and more time making arrests and following up on tips given them by the citizens. Who cares who gets credit for it?!?!?

Webster's Dictionary Version

Chief of Police- the head or leader of an organized body of Police; the person highest in authority: the chief of police.
City Council- a municipal body having legislative and administrative powers, such as passing ordinances and appropriating funds.
City Manager- a person not publicly elected but appointed by a city council to manage a city.
Mayor- the chief executive official, usually elected, of a city, village, or town.

Wrong battle

The battle is not between the Police Department and the Sheriff's Office, It never was. The battle is against City Hall and the idiots in it. The Police department and Sheriff's Deputies have always worked pretty close and well together. On occasion the Sheriff will sweet talk City Hall and tell them how good a job him and his street unit are doing, get a couple of dollars and buy some good equipment and there is debate as to whether or not the Sheriff wants to take over all of the law enforcement duties in the city but that's small potatoes compared to the issue of the City Manager, the Mayor and his council wanting to run a Police Department which they so dearly hate.

PORTSMOUTH NITWIT MECCA

Good. Hit the road,Corvello. You are NOT stupid and/or corrupt. You are just as out of place in Portsmouth as the Clampetts were in Beverly Hills. Don't worry, before anyone knows it, some village somewhere will be missing an idiot, and he or she will be the new Chief of Police .Mayor Holley For President, YAY!!

My cousin Vinny

Ironically Portsmouth is not what outsiders think of when they convey their false perceptions of the "dirty south" and corruption. The demographics really show that the 'good ole boy' network can be found in the most unexpected places.

I have printed this before but I received a ticket for doing nothing. I plead my case to the judge and he agreed I had not broken the traffic law I was charged with. He then found me guilty and fine me. He told me it was up to me to move on to a higher court for justice. The fix is in from the top down in that city. Stay away.

Eald/David-73

PSO sure has cleaned up Craddock. Taken a bite out of crime and all that. Don't get me wrong. The deputies working the streets are doing what they were told. And they are trying to do it well. But sit in court and watch a case for narcotics - if you can find one. Better yet, find out how many convictions they have received based on the number of arrests committed. The deputies do a fine job working process, court security and the jail as well as intake. But their experience is there, not on the street. Watson is making a policical move at the expense of his deputies to garner support. Eald/David, if you did a little research, like what I have mentioned, you find yourself a little more informed before spouting off ill-conveived opinions. Brown shirts do an admirable job completing the duties governed by the Commonwealth. Leave the PD alone and allow them to do their job without interference from city h

Chiefless Again

Portsmouth can't even manage to keep probably the best man for the job in a hundred years as a temp. Let's all turn to the sheriff and let his deputies manage the wild west (that's about the level of their training). Just yesterday two deputies conducted a vehicle pursuit and followed NONE of the policies or procedures for a vehicle pursuit and required police assistance to capture the bad guy. All of this while two sheriff's department lieutenants were on duty and said nothing. I'm sure you folks wont hear it that way the next time you talk to Bill Watson, but buy a police scanner. As for city management, go ride along with the police instead of the sheriff. If you want to know what the sheriff SHOULD be doing, go see how understaffed the jail, the courts and booking are. As for the lack of obvious communication within, not surprised at all. Mr. Moody, Mr Whitehurst and Mr. Heretick, I expect at least from you, Please look into this.

Glad I do not live in P-Town

This is another reason why I thank my lucky stars I am not a Portsmouth Resident. Not only did the city have to deal with an ex Sheriff who should have been arrested for Drunk Driving, a Mayor who is a complete racist, and now a Police Chief, who is smart enough to see the writing on the wall, and got out when he should. I have been a resident of Hampton Roads my entire life, and have never seen a city as poorly run as Portsmouth. My sympathy goes out to all the citizens of Portsmouth, who have to live in this "debacle" of a city on a daily basis.

hmmmm...I wonder

Is it possible for a city of its size to collapse? I mean to be a political and social wasteland, requiring another city and its professionals to come in and absorb Portsmouth's boundaries for its own to save its former citizens?! From things I've seen after spending years with work contacts who operate out of Portsmouth and things we see and hear coming out of Portsmouth, my scenario seems frighteningly plausible.

And though damaging as it may be to say this; I kinda hope that it does happen for the fact that loyal citizens deserve better treatment and I don't like seeing a scrub racist like Holley being PAID to make hideous comments and subject folks with his visual/verbal/sensory filth!

If only you knew

David-73 Just to let you know, all of the work the Sheriff's Office has taken credit for in any neighborhood in Portsmouth was credit taken but work done by the Portsmouth Police Department's Neighborhood Impact Officers with assistance from two or three of the Sheriff's deputies.

Police Chief

Chief Corvello,

Kudos to you for being a true Police Chief and not a Political Pawn.

Portsmouth city management has some very serious leadership problems.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Please note: Threaded comments work best if you view the oldest comments first.

More News Stories

More articles from: News rss feed   


Toolbox