The Tennessee Department of Safety served Lieutenant
Ronnie Shirley with a "minimum due process letter for termination"
surrounding the on-going investigation into Shirley's alleged
unauthorized access to the Integrated Criminal Justice Web Portal
(ICJWP).
"I
recommended to Commissioner Dave Mitchell that Lieutenant Shirley be
terminated for gross misconduct and violating the public's trust as
a Tennessee State Trooper," said Colonel Mike Walker. "The
recommendation to terminate was based upon evidence developed during
an investigation conducted by the Department of Safety's Office of
Professional Responsibility (OPR) and the Criminal Investigation
Division (CID). Lt. Shirley's conduct and actions relative to this
investigation are unacceptable for a Tennessee State Trooper. This
type of behavior overshadows the majority of Troopers who are true
professionals, dedicated to protecting the citizens of Tennessee with
respect to their civil liberties."
On
July 2, 2008, Commissioner Mitchell referred the investigation to the
THP Criminal Investigation Division (CID) as the lead agency, after
information of Lt. Shirley's possible violation of the ICJWP access
agreement was first discovered in the OPR investigation. Expert
assistance was also requested of the TBI to conduct forensic searches
of all state computers available to Lt. Shirley and for the FBI to
conduct a complete and thorough search of the FBI's National Crime
Information Center database located in West Virginia. In addition,
Commissioner Mitchell contacted the Davidson County District
Attorney's Office and the United States Attorney's Office to
present the initial facts surrounding Lt. Shirley's investigation
to ensure that this investigation was appropriately reviewed for all
potential criminal violations.
"The
investigation determined there was no political motive behind the
actions of Lt. Shirley nor was he acting at the direction of any
other individual," said Department of Safety Commissioner Dave
Mitchell. "No politicians or known elected public officials were
among the individuals checked. There is no evidence whatsoever of any
political motivation behind the unauthorized checks conducted by
Lieutenant Shirley."
Tennessee House Majority Leader Gary Odom (D-Nashville) said, "The thing that struck me is that no motive was established or offered... While the department has indicated that there was no political motive, the question remains, what was Lt. Shirley's motive? I still believe the names of the victims of these illegal background checks should be released. I continue to believe the list of names is a public record and should be made available under our open record laws. That release will be fundamental to an open and transparent investigative process in this matter."
The CID investigation has determined that 182 individual names were accessed through the ICJWP portal from October 19, 2006, when Lt. Shirley first accessed the portal, to July 3, 2008, when his access was terminated. These inquiries included access of the Tennessee Department of Safety's Driver License records, the Tennessee Department of Revenue's Title and Registration records, the Tennessee Department of Correction's Tennessee Offender Management Information System (TOMIS) and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation's Sexual Offender Register.
The THP says it will not release the individuals' names since the investigation into the matter continues.
A department spokesperson says to date, 139 individuals have been interviewed. 132 of these individuals said they did not authorize, request, or consent to Lt. Shirley accessing their records, and only seven of these individuals requested Lt. Shirley access their information.
43 individuals have not been interviewed, and seven of them were
determined to be deceased. The investigation has determined that Lt.
Shirley engaged in criminal activity in violation of T.C.A.
39-14-602, Unlawful Access of a Computer, by his unauthorized
access of these records. The majority of Lt. Shirley's queries
were to view photos and driver license records of citizens that are
protected by the Federal Driver Privacy Protection Act (DPPA).
Certain data queried is federally protected. All queries of this
nature must be for legitimate law enforcement purposes. Lt. Shirley
did not have a legitimate law enforcement purpose to check the
records of these 132 individuals.
The
timeline of the investigation to date is as follows:
At the conclusion of this on-going criminal investigation by CID, the Department of Safety will request a prosecutorial opinion from both state and federal prosecutors.
"Actions
of this nature will not be tolerated by members of the Department of
Safety," emphasized Commissioner Mitchell. "Since Governor
Bredesen appointed me as Commissioner 20 months ago, the Department
of Safety has made significant changes in the investigation of
serious misconduct and criminal activity and that has not and will
not change."
The
Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) was established in March
2007 and the Criminal Investigation Division (CID) was reorganized in
September 2007. Since then, twelve State Troopers have been
terminated and three Troopers resigned in lieu of termination.
The spokesman said that "Lieutenant Shirley
is entitled to due process."