Hey, there! Log in / Register

Boston cop who was fired because of Jan. 6 tweets calling Democrats and some Republicans traitors sues over that and city's denial of a religious exemption for Covid-19 shots

Joseph Abasciano, fired as a Boston cop in 2023 for going to Washington and posting a series of tweets about the "traitors" in the Capitol and across the country before and during the events of Jan. 6, 2021, yesterday sued Boston and its police department, alleging violations of his First Amendment rights to both free speech and religious freedom by a mayor and police commissioner allegedly out to get him.

In his suit, filed in US District Court in Boston, the former West Roxbury resident who now lives in New Hampshire says his tweets, posted under a pseudonym, were an exercise of his First Amendment rights as a private citizen, his "patriots vs. traitors" theme - which included the hope that an election official in Georgia be "dragged away in handcuffs" - was a paraphrase of some of the writing of Ulysses S. Grant, nobody ever protested them save for one anonymous tweet to BPD, he never threatened Mike Pence or members of congress and he never entered the Capitol building or participated in violence when he and another BPD officer traveled to Washington.

Abasciano also charges that the city violated the First Amendment by refusing to grant him a religious exemption for the Covid-19 shots that city employees were ordered to get.

Abasciano is seeking a court order requiring the city to make him a detective - a rank for which he applied but was not allowed to attain - a declaration that Mayor Wu, Police Commissioner Michael Cox and other BPD officers done him wrong and enough damages to make them think twice about ever pulling such a stunt again.

In his complaint, Abasciano details how he was granted leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act, through Jan. 23, 2021 to care for his wife, pregnant with their third child - and that in January, 2021, he was also designated as "medically incapacitated" because of a flare up of a knee injury he had suffered in 2014.

He alleges that violence was the furthest thing from his mind when he and officer Jose Diaz traveled to Washington, DC before Congress was scheduled to certify that Joe Biden was indeed elected president, that his "main concern was whether the Constitution was followed correctly" and that despite references to #1776 in his tweets, he was not calling for a revolution, but just for Mike Pence to delay any certification until the legislatures in four states could review their election results.

He says and Diaz were on the opposite side of the Capitol from where gas-spraying, truncheon-wielding "patriots" were smashing their way into the Capitol, beating local cops and erecting a noose for Mike Pence, that the only violence he saw was somebody "take some whacks at a window."

Yes, he acknowledged, at 6:44 that morning, from Washington, he tweeted:

MAGA Millions of Patriots here in DC. Today is a day for choosing. Today there will be only two parties in America. Traitor and Patriots!” #January6 #MAGA #MarchForTrump

But besides having a First Amendment right to speak as a private citizen under a pseudonym, who doesn't know that's a reference to a section of a letter Ulysses S Grant wrote to his father?

Whatever may have been my political opinions before I have but one sentiment now. That is we have a Government, and laws and a flag and they must all be sustained. There are but two parties now, Traitors & Patriots and I want hereafter to be ranked with the latter, and I trust, the stronger party.

At 3:54 p.m., the complaint continues, he tweeted at Mike Pence:

I hope you never sleep well again @VP your Treasonous Act led to the murder of an innocent girl and the death of America. You are not a Godly man. I guess @ LLinwood was right about you all along.

Is that a threat? Hardly, he avers.

Police officials, including Cox, who made the ultimate decision to fire Abasciano, however, did not see those tweets as a simple exercise in the First Amendment. In March, 2023 Cox fired Abascione - and two other officers, including a sergeant who helped lead early morning anti-vax screaming sessions outside Mayor Wu's house. In Abascione's case, the rationale provided in a report by a BPD deputy superintendent was that his tweets, which could be read as supporting violence, in particular against elected officials, violated the very core of what it means to be a Boston police officer:

Officer Abasciano is unable to impartially and without bias perform his duties as a sworn member of the Department. Officer Abasciano post [sic] suggests he views the members of the community as either patriots or traitors. The comments indicate a rigid viewpoint that does not recognize the duty to protect the rights of all individuals, rather it divides people as traitors or patriots. Even after Officer Abasciono was aware the rally had degenerated into a criminal riot resulting in at least one death and the destruction of property in the US Capitol, Officer Abasciano continued to use incendiary language and blamed Vice President Pence for the events rather than the criminal rioters showing a lack of commitment to preserving life and property, or respect for our law enforcement partners. I find that Officer Abasciano twitter posts indicate that he is unable or unfit to continue as a member of the Department. ...

Officer Abasciano argued that he was merely engaged in political hyperbole. I was not persuaded. Officer Abasciano used violent and loaded language suggesting a civil war or a violent revolution. Even his use of the Ulysses S Grant quote or the #1776 suggest the use of violence is appropriate to address political disagreements. Such comments run contrary to the philosophy and mission of the Boston Police Department to treat all members of the community as worthy of police protection and police services.

In addition to suing over the way BPD treated his tweets, Abasciano also alleges he was denied access to training classes to become a detective - a role he sought because it would be less physically taxing on his knee than continuing as a patrol officer - because he refused to get vaccinated against Covid-19. He says when he sought answers in person as to why he was left off a list of eligible candidates, he says the supervisor he talked to asked him if he had mentioned not being vaccinated and then added "I would be careful about who you email about that” or words to that effect.

Abasciano's complaint lists ten formal charges, including failure to provide a reasonable accommodation related to a disability under both federal and state law, religious discrimination, gender discrimination - for actions dating to 2018 to allegedly deny him a chance at being promoted to detective - violation of his First Amendment right to free speech, retaliation for exercising that right, defamation and intentional interference with an advantageous business relationship.

Abasciano is the second former member of the West Roxbury Republican ward committee to sue the city. Hal Shurtleff, who led a virulently pro-Trump, anti-bike-lane slate that took over the committee in the 2020 elections, sued the city when officials wouldn't let him fly a "Christian" flag over City Hall Plaza.

Shurtleff, who, like Abasciano, now lives in New Hampshire, ultimately won when the Supreme Court concluded the city didn't have a rational policy for deciding who could run a flag up one of the three flagpoles at the plaza, and he was allowed to fly his flag over the plaza for a couple of hours in August, 2022.

Neighborhoods: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon Complete complaint626.75 KB


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Urban Dictionary says: "A bully who harasses their victim, then goes crying fake tears to a person or group of authority or publicity claiming that their victim harassed them, in order to encourage them to wrongly persecute the victim as well."

up
Voting closed 74

He wins lawsuit. I personally wish I never took that vaccine and boosters. I’m a healthy active/fit middle aged man that went from a consistent 120/80BP to now having low BP and fainting spells. Maybe a coincidence maybe not but forcing people through a mandate to choose either their livelihood or what they deem is best for their body was never the way to go. We were made into political pawns and those pieces are always sacrificed.

** I do not denounce vaccines in general but this one did not need to be given to the masses. Hep B to babies is another one. The off chance your child grows up to be a sex worker or intravenous drug user they can then get the vaccine.

up
Voting closed 53

It probably won't be because of the vaccine issue, because federal judges in New England have pretty consistently upheld the right of employers to require shots in a public-health emergency.

up
Voting closed 69

The vaccine also made you a preeminent (if paranoid) expert on vaccine efficacy. So you win some, you lose some!

up
Voting closed 77

as to who thinks they are an expert.

up
Voting closed 32

Have you ever read the oath Boston Police Officers take? You don't just turn that off when you are off duty:

I, ___ , do solemnly swear that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the commonwealth of Massachusetts, and will support the constitution thereof and the constitution of the United States, that I will obey the lawful orders of all my superior officers, and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent on me as ___ according to the best of my ability and understanding, agreeably to the rules and regulations of the constitution and the laws of the commonwealth and the United States. So help me, God.

He encouraged Mike Pence to disregard the constitution. He showed a failure to be impartial by dividing voters/politicians into Traitors and Patriots. He violated his oath as a Police Officer which is a firing offense

As for the vaccine thing. Where are the scriptures banning vaccine use? Did his priest/pastor file a written document against the COVID vaccine and Mr. Abasciano's absolute aversion to it on religious grounds?

No money for you! #mailboxjoe.

up
Voting closed 34

to do with my comment?

up
Voting closed 22

Not a thing. I was just answering Anon. You were just part of the thread from that post.

up
Voting closed 24

Coincidence or some other underlying health issue.

up
Voting closed 57

want to rethink that Hep B stance. It's available all around the world. Sex or intravenous drugs are not the only way is spreads. All you just need exposure to blood or bodily fluids, so taking care of wounds or simply a sick baby can expose you.

Your experience with the Covid vaccine(s) is not the same as mine. Anecdotal stories do not equal data. Sorry.

up
Voting closed 85

That's not why they're vaccinating children. They're vaccinating because children can be infected if another child bites them, or a child they play with gets hurt and your child touches the cut. And that playmate may have acquired the virus from their mother during pregancy.

Also, the odds of your child growing up to have unprotected sex with someone, sometime, are nontrivial. So are the chances of them sharing a toothbrush, including by picking up a roommate's toothbrush without realizing it.

up
Voting closed 69

Just so much ignorance and nonsense here that I don't know where to begin.

HepB was a problem for healthcare workers and still is. The vast majority of those who died in the second wave of COVID were not vaccinated.

up
Voting closed 58

A lot of the symptoms people blame on the vaccine, can also be attributed to Covid infections and Long Covid.

up
Voting closed 19

Have you investigated other potential causes for low blood pressure and fainting spells? Are there other reports of people experiencing the same due to Covid vaccinations?

You do not know that the Covid vaccinations did not need to be given to the masses. What you deem best for your body? An irony of our humanness is our painfully limited knowledge and understanding of the seemingly infinite complexity of the human body. In other words whether you know what is best for body - much less anyone else - where vaccinations are concerned is extremely doubtful.

Your comment about Hep B vaccinations belies a dangerous ignorance. Hep B is contracted by far more people than only sex workers and IV drug users. To try to dismiss the importance of vaccines with ignorant references is insulting and demeaning to the writer's dignity.

So please, do not let poor logic, ignorance and arrogance get in the way of your learning why you have low blood pressure and fainting spells. Don't let ignorance be your downfall.

up
Voting closed 36

https://alabamareflector.com/2024/01/22/as-trump-solidifies-support-some...

"Nor Joe Abasciano, of Milton, who supported Ted Cruz in 2016 but came around “late” to Trump when he became president."

up
Voting closed 28

I love that this loser got fired and is still miserable. LOL.

up
Voting closed 44

AND die.

Or leave the country. Just stop your traitorous bellyaching. It's getting old!!!!

up
Voting closed 37

To NH.
Good riddance.

up
Voting closed 39

NH does not need to become any more of a haven for these fuckwits. A festering boil is noxious whether you see it or not.

up
Voting closed 21

I wasn't aware police officers believed in or supported the first amendment.

up
Voting closed 19

but enjoy your cliquey quipping about such low level matters as vaccines while ye may. Orange Feces has likely put an end already to the peaceful transfer of power in the United States-- it was done once by a President, so now it will be perpetual like a banana Republic. Because unfortunately this is a country wherein most adults, all of them actually bananas, would fail a middle school civics class (they would not even make it to try first quiz without an insurrection against the teacher). I don't look forward to it, but I fear this 'message board' is going to be preoccupied with a lot worse things in the coming months. What a hard lesson it is going to be to face that fact that you cannot actually successfully educate most human beings. Unless you are Putin or Putin et al aligned, that fact is going to bother you for the rest of your life.
Gee I hope I'm wrong and those silly little polls are right!

up
Voting closed 19

A promotion is not a "reasonable accomodation."

up
Voting closed 20