By Press Release Submitted to OnMilwaukee.com Published Mar 24, 2015 at 5:06 PM

Last night, a panel comprised of three Milwaukee Police and Fire Commission members upheld the decision to fire Officer Christopher Manney, who shot and killed Dontre Hamilton during a confrontation in Red Arrow Park last April. After the verdict, Mayor Tom Barrett released the following statement:

"I support the decisions reached by Fire and Police Commission’s disciplinary appeals panel upholding the decisions made and actions taken by Police Chief Ed Flynn. 

"I thank the citizen members of the panel and Retired Judge Michael Skwierawski for their patience, professionalism and willingness to serve.

"Last October, I stated my support for the Chief’s decision to terminate then Officer Manney. I said at the time that many people would be unhappy with the Chief's decision. Some would feel it went too far and others would feel more needed to be done. 

"What was most important then, and still is today, is to find a way for our City to heal and move forward.

"The tragic death of Dontre Hamilton has shaken our community, and we have much work to do.

"We have taken proactive and positive steps to address additional critical incident training and to evaluate how we, as a community, provide services and support to individuals with mental illness. Our work is not complete, and together we must move forward."

Today, Ald. Bob Donovan also released a statement concerning the panel's decision:

"I’ll begin by saying this – I realize full well how volatile this situation is. I further realize that there may indeed be a significant number of people who may disagree with what I’m about to say, but what’s right is right.

"The shooting at Red Arrow Park was undoubtedly a tragedy every which way you look at it. But one does not address or attempt to alleviate the pains of one tragedy by creating another. Yet that is precisely what occurred here.  

"As I’ve said previously, the firing of Officer Christopher Manney was, in my opinion, ill-conceived, unwarranted and politically motivated.

"I have spent time with Chris Manney and gotten to know him, and I find him not only to be a good officer, but a good human being. You ought to read some of the letters he’s received from people on his beat. I can assure you he didn’t wake up that April morning thinking about who he was going to shoot that day.

"Sadly, he has become the scapegoat for the racially-charged political environment we live in. I personally am urging Officer Manney to pursue this case in Circuit Court. 

"In addition, I am very concerned about how this decision will impact the already incredibly low morale of our officers. I fear that an increasing number of officers will put their blinders on and do the absolute minimum, fearful that any difficult decision made on the streets will come back to haunt them and be second-guessed by armchair command staffers and Monday morning quarterbacks. 

"Also, in Chief Flynn’s very first speech, moments after he was sworn in, he promised this community and this Department that he would treat differently honest mistakes from willful misconduct. If indeed Officer Manney made a mistake, and I’m not saying he did, but if he did, it never ever rose to the level of willful misconduct.

"Finally, I would be remiss if I didn’t say this: Chief Ed Flynn is undoubtedly a man of many talents, chief among them being his eloquence, his command of the language, his choice of words, yet his deliberate choice of the words "bumbling" and "incompetence" in reference to Officer Manney’s actions on the day in question sickens me. I should not have to point out that for 13 years – long before Chief Flynn arrived in Milwaukee – Officer Manney was putting his uniform on and placing his life on the line in the service of this community and before that, doing the same as a military veteran of this great nation.

"Shame on Chief Flynn for that deliberate insult to a fine man and a good police officer."