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Mass. Environmental Police chief fired; review finds he spied on workers

PAT GREENHOUSE/GLOBE STAFF

Colonel James McGinn, the head of the Massachusetts Environmental Police, was fired Friday after an internal state review found he fixed two tickets, installed unauthorized surveillance cameras, and hired a private investigator to follow an officer.

A Friday report from that review, which was conducted by the legal office for the state’s Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, concluded that the firing of McGinn was necessary “to restore confidence in the prosecutorial functions and internal operations of the Massachusetts Environmental State Police.”

McGinn, a former State Police sergeant who previously served as Governor Charlie Baker’s personal campaign driver, was suspended without pay earlier this month, following the Globe’s inquiries into $250 citations issued to two Bedford men after their sons were allegedly caught by environmental officers riding unregistered dirt bikes. McGinn’s former neighbor told the Globe that he had called McGinn to contest one of the tickets shortly after it was issued in August 2015. The citation never made its way into the court system, records show.

The agency has weathered controversies under McGinn, including questionable payroll practices and a 2015 overhaul of his management team that, according to the Lowell Sun, appeared to violate internal policies.

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Timothy M. Burke, a Needham attorney who is representing McGinn, said the termination was politically motivated.

“This was, to say the least, an amateurish investigation,” said Burke on Friday. “Anybody familiar with the internal workings of the environmental police knows that Colonel McGinn in the last three years has done everything in his power to professionalize the agency.”

The investigation into McGinn looked at the two citations and found “a reasonable basis to conclude that Colonel McGinn influenced the disposition of the citations in a manner that benefited a personal acquaintance,” according to the internal review.

An internal agency memo, disclosed earlier this week by the Globe, described a behind-the-scenes effort by police to void and round up existing copies of the citations. The memo noted that Major William Bilotta had planned to pick up copies of the citations from the two offenders and that officers had gathered all other outstanding copies of the tickets.

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According to the state investigation, Bilotta, who retired in February, confirmed that he ordered an officer to void the citations. The report concluded that Bilotta “had knowledge of the citations and the connections to Colonel McGinn’s family and acquaintances,” and that Bilotta and McGinn had a discussion about the citations. A message left for Bilotta was not immediately returned Friday evening.

The state investigation also probed allegations that McGinn, who earned $133,000 last year, had installed cameras at the agency’s inland enforcement headquarters in Westborough without proper authorization.

According to the report, McGinn admitted to another law enforcement official in late August that he had the cameras installed in order to “conduct surveillance based on suspicions that employees were improperly reporting work hours.”

Installing such cameras requires approval from the state’s executive office and in certain circumstances, “it could also require discussion with the union,” according to Friday’s report. Attempts to reach the president of the environmental police officers union were not successful Friday evening.

Peter Lorenz, a spokesman for the state’s Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, said in an e-mail Friday that McGinn used agency funds to install the cameras, which have been removed. The cameras “will be re-purposed in an appropriate manner that provides facility security,” he said. That action will be done in coordination with the officers union, he said.

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Additionally, a state finance director revealed that he “received an invoice from a private investigator firm for services provided” to McGinn, the report said.

Officials later learned that the private investigator services included watching and videotaping an officer on 16 separate days in August and September, “in order to determine if the officer was reporting for duty in accordance with his time records.” Surveillance of an employee “would have required full justification and legal and other approvals,” according to the review.

McGinn led the 83-member police force since Baker appointed him to the position in 2014.

Burke, McGinn’s attorney, said that when his client took over, the agency was underperforming, and as result he earned “a large number of critics in the agency who he tried to hold accountable.”

The installation of cameras at the Westborough office, said Burke, was “consistent with what every other law enforcement agency does.”

The cameras were intended to help ensure workers arrived on time and completed their shifts, said Burke. McGinn, said Burke, was being retaliated against.

“His termination is based upon political motivation, not upon any misconduct on his part,” he said.

McGinn intends to publicize “significant misconduct on the part of those holding supervisory responsibilities” above him, said Burke.

In a statement, Governor Baker said he believes that “Colonel McGinn’s actions were inappropriate for any state employee, especially the head of the Environmental Police.”

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In the statement, Baker said his administration will now start installing new leadership at the agency “to implement stronger internal controls across the Environmental Police force.”

Speaking to the Globe on Friday, Baker talked about why he chose McGinn.

“Well, he had 25 years of law enforcement experience,” he said. “He was retired as a sergeant, he was a certified FEMA disaster instructor and lecturer, and was a practicing attorney. He was qualified.”

He added that the state “ran the investigation through all the traps that it needed to be run through and at the end of that investigation, made the decision to terminate him.”

In response to McGinn’s firing, Kevin Ready, the campaign manager for Baker’s Democratic gubernatorial opponent, Jay Gonzalez, asked in a Friday statement, “When is Charlie Baker going to take responsibility for the culture [of] corruption that he admits has flourished under his watch?’’

“Time and time again, Governor Baker has put politics ahead of acting in the best interest of the people of Massachusetts,” said Ready. “Charlie Baker has been governor for four years, when is he going to take charge and lead?”

Lorenz, the state spokesman, said in a statement, “The Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs will begin a review of internal controls and policies in an effort to restore accountability and public trust in the Massachusetts Environmental Police.”

He continued, “The unauthorized contract for surveillance has been terminated, and a formal investigation into alleged timesheet irregularities has been opened.”

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Matt Rocheleau of Globe staff and Globe correspondent Matt Stout contributed to this report. Danny McDonald can be reached at daniel.mcdonald@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @Danny__McDonald.