City of Woonsocket Faces Civil Rights Lawsuit
for Alleged Police Misconduct

Mack Blackie spent 31 days locked up in 2022 for a crime he did not commit

The ACLU of Rhode Island is suing the City of Woonsocket on behalf of Mack Blackie for wrongfully arresting and detaining him in 2022.
The ACLU of Rhode Island is suing the City of Woonsocket on behalf of Mack Blackie for wrongfully arresting and detaining him in 2022.
Lynn Arditi/The Public’s Radio
Share
The ACLU of Rhode Island is suing the City of Woonsocket on behalf of Mack Blackie for wrongfully arresting and detaining him in 2022.
The ACLU of Rhode Island is suing the City of Woonsocket on behalf of Mack Blackie for wrongfully arresting and detaining him in 2022.
Lynn Arditi/The Public’s Radio
City of Woonsocket Faces Civil Rights Lawsuit
for Alleged Police Misconduct
Copy

The Rhode Island chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union is suing the City of Woonsocket and a former police detective for wrongfully arresting and incarcerating a homeless man for a 2022 break-in.

The lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court in Providence alleges that Mack Blackie’s civil rights were violated when he was twice arrested and detained by Woonsocket police for a crime he didn’t commit.

Blackie spent more than a month locked up at the Adult Correctional Institutions on the felony breaking-and-entering charge because he couldn’t afford to pay the bail. (The felony charge has been dismissed and the case expunged from Blackie’s record.)

“This is a tragic case,” said Joshua D. Xavier, a Warwick lawyer representing Blackie who is working on the case with the Rhode Island ACLU. “This case really demonstrates that the harm caused by injustice is exacerbated significantly when the victims of the injustice are indigent.’’

Blackie was homeless and struggling with alcohol addiction when he was wrongfully arrested and detained twice in 2022 and charged with breaking into the apartment of a Woonsocket couple.

According to the suit, Woonsocket Police Officer Timothy M. Hammond, who was then a detective, made “false statements” in his recording of a witness statement, as well as in affidavits in support of Blackie’s arrest in August 2022 and again the following October. And though Hammond told the witness that he would arrange a photo lineup so the couple could identify the suspect, the officer never did, the complaint stated.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The hospital’s operator says it plans to keep the Noreen Stonor Drexel Birthing Center open, but that it needs to raise more funds to ensure its viability
Revived ‘Riding the Circuit’ program brings real-world clarity on law, life to students
From tips for your gardening and a documentary about book bans to the Greenes of Rhode Island and a book club that meets at a local cat café, here’s what’s happening at the Tiverton Public Library this month
Plus: the African American Museum of Rhode Island opens this weekend and Andrew Bird plays with the RI Philharmonic
Barrington businessman points to bridge failures and payroll woes as proof Rhode Island needs a reset, entering the race as an independent
Says coastal regulators violated their own rules when they approved scaled-down scallop farm