Did Bill Maher Just End Gavin Newsom's Political Career?
He'll Have to Leave the State? Supposedly, the Dirt on Graham Platner Is...
The Latest TikTok Trend Is Sickening...and It Involves Charlie Kirk
'Crying Like a Baby': Trump Goes Scorched Earth on Van Jones
Man Who Stabbed Social Worker at San Francisco Hospital Is an Illegal Alien...
'Food Insecurity' Is the Left's Newest Narrative
We Have an Update on Rudy Giuliani
Jonathan Capehart Had a Bad Night on PBS Newshour
Thom Tillis Throws His Support Behind James Comey
Tucker Carlson's New York Times Interview Did Not Go Well
The Iranian Government Is Lying Again, and Now the Rules of Engagement Have...
At Least Ten Shot at Oklahoma Campground; Suspect Still at Large
Breaking News: Moms Matter
Scott Bessent Slams Sen. Warren, Biden Admin, for the Death of Spirit Airlines
Manny Rutinel's Climate Extremism Is Worse Than You Thought
Tipsheet

Police Chief Praised Armed Citizens Keeping Out Looters. Then He Was Forced to Resign.

Police Chief Praised Armed Citizens Keeping Out Looters. Then He Was Forced to Resign.
AP Photo/John Minchillo

Lowell, Michigan Police Chief Steve Bukala was forced to resign after using the department's official Facebook page to praise four armed citizens who protected businesses from being looted.

Advertisement

“We at the Lowell Police Department support the legally armed citizen and the Second Amendment,” the chief said in the now-deleted Facebook post. 

Bukala also shared the message on his personal Facebook page.

According to WOOD-TV, City Manager Michael Burns said Bukala committed “conduct unbecoming of a police officer,” and violated policy that “Personnel shall not allow personal feelings to influence their professional conduct.” 

Burns felt the Facebook post “inserted political and debatable issues into a departmental notice which causes unneeded concern by some city residents. Your actions created an unnecessary negative portrayal of the city in some citizens’ view.”

The city manager said Bukala overstepped his bounds by providing “unneeded personal commentary and inserted political and debatable issues into a department notice and caused unneeded concern by some city residents," MLive reported.

Advertisement

Related:

SECOND AMENDMENT

The chief was given until 5 p.m. on Thursday to resign. If he didn't do it, at 5:01 p.m. he would be fired.

“I’ve decided it’s time to start my life outside of the Lowell Police Department and my future looks very bright,” Bukala wrote in his resignation email.

The department shared a statement on Facebook apologizing for "these mistakes."

The next day the city released a statement saying Bukala resigned. 

Something like this shouldn't be controversial, especially when we have the Second Amendment in our Constitution. Sheriffs have taken an oath to uphold the Constitution, which means protecting people's right to keep and bear arms. These young men should be commended for defending their communities. And Chief Bukala deserves to be applauded for not trampling on people's rights. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement