A police officer arrested in October on allegations of sexual assault
by a public servant, official oppression and theft has been fired.
Douglas
V. Campbell’s indefinite suspension from the Fort Worth Police
Department took effect Dec. 23, according to Civil Service documents
obtained Monday by the Star-Telegram.
Campbell,
33, is accused of sexually assaulting a prostitute, threatening another
that he would take her to jail if she did not engage in sexual
activity, and stealing $2 from an abandoned vehicle.
He was
indicted on the sexual assault and official oppression cases Dec. 18 and
remains free on bail awaiting trial in all three cases, according to
Tarrant County court records.
“Officer Campbell, of course, denies
those accusations in the indictments and looks forward to his day in
court,” said Jim Lane, his defense attorney.
Campbell has appealed
his termination. His attorney in the appeal, Craig Driskell of the
Combined Law Enforcement Association of Texas, declined to comment
Monday.
The department’s special investigation unit began
investigating Campbell after receiving information in August from other
officers that Campbell was possibly having sex with prostitutes.
Investigators began conducting surveillance of Campbell, then interviewing women with whom he had contact.
One
prostitute told officers that Campbell had removed his penis from his
pants and had told her to engage in sexual contact with him or he would
take her to jail. She said the conversation stopped, however, when
another officer drove up, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.
Another
prostitute told investigators that Campbell had touched her and pulled
her G-string between her legs, causing her pain, the affidavit states.
According
to the disciplinary letter signed by Police Chief Jeff Halstead,
Campbell admitted paying for sexual acts at least five times since being
commissioned as a Fort Worth officer in 2007.
The theft charge
stems from allegations that Campbell removed $2 from an abandoned
vehicle that he had been dispatched to, then give it to a female friend
whom he had arranged to meet there. The incident was recorded, according
to the disciplinary letter.
Campbell also did not accurately report the chain of custody of narcotics found inside the van, the disciplinary letter states.
Halstead said an internal investigation sustained eight allegations of misconduct against Campbell.
“His
actions are a disgrace to our department, our city, and the policing
profession,” Halstead said in an emailed statement. “I will continue to
hold all employees accountable for any violations of policy that
jeopardize the level of public trust within our community.”