Judge Orders Release of Report on Alleged Assault By Canaan Cop

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Courtesy photo

Crystal and Doug Wright

By DAMIEN FISHER, InDepthNH.org 

Grafton Superior Court Judge Peter Bornstein ordered the town of Canaan to publicly release a report on former Police Officer Samuel Provenza who is accused in a civil lawsuit of assaulting a town resident during a 2017 traffic stop.

Bornstein’s order, released this week, came as Provenza, now a New Hampshire State Trooper, was fighting in court to keep the report private. Valley News journalist James Kenyon was seeking a copy of the 2018 report conducted by Municipal Resources Inc., or MRI.

Crystal Eastman Wright accused Provenza of assaulting her during the 2017 traffic stop, prompting the MRI report. According to Bornstein’s ruling, the MRI report found that Wright’s excessive force allegation against Provenza was “not sustained,” though nothing is known about how that conclusion was reached.

Bornstein sided with the Valley News in finding that there is significant public interest in knowing how police agencies investigate themselves.

“First, the public has a right to know that police take their complaints seriously and that the investigation was ‘comprehensive and accurate,’” Bornstein wrote. “Second, the public similarly has the right to know whether the police officer in question was given a fair investigation aligned with traditional notions of due process. Third, as is evidenced by the national conversation concerning policing in the United States, transparency at all levels of police conduct investigations is fundamentally important to insure the public’s confidence and trust in local police departments.” 

Crystal Wright and her husband Douglas Wright are now suing Provenza and the Canaan Police Department, as well as the town, in the United States District Court in Concord. 

“Plain and simple, this case is about a woman who was subjected to unnecessary, excessive brute force by a male officer two to three times her size,” said the Wrights’ attorney Samantha Heuring.

When Provenza pulled Wright over on Nov. 30 of 2017, Crystal Wright knew Provenza, and knew about his reputation, the lawsuit states.

“Mrs. Wright had heard about his history of and reputation for using violence while carrying out his law enforcement duties. In fact, Mrs. Wright heard that Officer Provenza frequently drew his gun and taser on people he came into contact with. Mrs. Wright had also heard that Officer Provenza had engaged in a pattern of roughly handling women, including pulling their hair,” the lawsuit states.

Wright and her family had issues with the school bus driver and after hearing her daughter had another problem Crystal Wright was following the bus when she was stopped by Provenza, according to the lawsuit. 

During the stop, Provenza put his head into Crystal Wright’s car and was acting aggressively, according to the lawsuit. Crystal Wright is a sexual abuse survivor, according to the lawsuit, and she was uncomfortable with Provenza’s behavior. She picked up her iPhone and started recording when she heard a “ruckus,” the lawsuit states.

“It was Officer Provenza grabbing onto the door and ripping on it in an attempt to open it. His eyes were bulging out of his head, his veins were popping out of his neck, and he was visibly enraged,” the lawsuit states.

Provenza then allegedly grabbed the 5-foot, two-inch 115-pound woman by her ponytail and dragged her out the her car as she was screaming and begging for someone to help, according to the lawsuit. He handcuffed her and hit her in the knee, despite the fact she was not resisting, according to the lawsuit. That blow to the knee tore her ACL, according to the lawsuit. Though Provenza’s police cruiser was equipped with a dashboard camera, that camera was not turned on during her stop, according to the lawsuit.

Crystal Wright was eventually charged with resisting arrest for the incident, but was later found not guilty, according to the lawsuit. She was convicted of disobeying a police officer, according to Bornstein’s order, and she lost her appeal to that conviction.

The lawsuit claims that the town and the police department knew about Provenza’s violence and that he was never properly disciplined.

Provenza was the only other witness present with New Hampshire State Trooper Christopher O’Toole when he shot and killed Jesse Champney in December of 2017. The shooting was deemed justified despite the fact Champney was running away from O’Toole and died from a gunshot wound to his back, according to the New Hampshire Attorney General’s report.

InDepthNH.org has filed a right-to-know request for a copy of the MRI report. The report must be released next week, according to Bornstein’s order, though Provenza can halt that with an appeal to the New Hampshire Supreme Court. 

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