RI assistant AG, who told police, ‘you’re going to regret this,’ placed on unpaid leave

the article reports that Devon Hogan Flanagan, a special assistant attorney general in Rhode Island, was placed on six months of unpaid leave after a viral video showed her aggressively confronting police officers at a Newport restaurant. Flanagan and her friend were asked to leave the Clarke Cooke House, but she resisted, repeatedly asserting her authority by saying, “I’m an AG” and warning the officers, “You’re going to regret this.” The video captured her demanding police turn off their body cameras and refusing to comply with orders to leave. She was subsequently charged with trespassing, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest. Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha, who reviewed the case, condemned her behavior as embarrassing and stated he hopes she reflects on her actions and makes positive changes.


RI assistant AG, who told police, ‘you’re going to regret this,’ placed on unpaid leave

Devon Hogan Flanagan, a special assistant attorney general in Rhode Island, who was caught on video berating police officers trying to remove her from a restaurant after she was asked to leave, has been placed on unpaid leave for six months.

Flanagan was repeatedly heard shouting to police officers, “I’m an AG” and “You’re going to regret this” in a video clip that has since gone viral. Flanagan and her friend, Veronica Hannan, were asked to leave Clarke Cooke House in Newport, Rhode Island, when officers arrived, and the now infamous confrontation took place. 

The video showed that police repeatedly asked Flanagan and Hannan to leave. However, Flanagan resisted those requests and demanded that the police officer turn off his bodycam. 

“I want you to turn your bodycam off,” Flanagan said. “Protocol is that you turn it off. It’s a citizen request that you turn it off.”

“Let’s go. I don’t want to arrest you guys,” an officer said. “You’re not going to arrest us,” Hogan Flanagan responded.

Flanagan was charged with trespassing, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest on Aug. 14, the date of the initial confrontation, the Washington Examiner previously reported. As of Aug. 19, Attorney General Peter Neronha said that he was reviewing the details of the video.

On Monday, he made a decision. He met with Flanagan and informed her that she was being placed on six months of unpaid leave.

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“Flanagan mistreated the Newport Police Department and embarrassed herself, the Office, and frankly me,” Neronha said in a statement. 

“I sincerely hope she takes this time to reflect on the seriousness of her conduct and makes corrective changes in her life,” he added. “She has a long road ahead of her, but I believe that in the long run, our worst moments can inspire us to become better people.”



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