Questioned earlier this summer about a 2003 lawsuit he had filed against an Oregon city and its police chief, Washougal mayoral candidate Derik Ford claimed he filed the lawsuit after being dismissed from the Sweet Home, Oregon, police department for being a “probationary, non-union-represented employee” who “didn’t fit in.”
“It was a toxic environment, a toxic department, and I knew it wasn’t a good fit for me within literally weeks of being there,” Ford told The Post-Record in June when questioned about his short time with the Sweet Home Police Department. “They just said, ‘It wasn’t a good fit, you’re a probationary employee.'”
Public records recently obtained by the Post-Record, however, paint a different picture.
The records, which include a 2004 summary judgment ruling by the United States District Court for the District of Oregon and a dismissal of Ford’s lawsuit against the city of Sweet Home and its police chief, show Sweet Home police leaders dismissed Ford from his duties as a probationary police officer after learning Ford had been dismissed from a police academy in Alaska and failed to disclose that information during his hiring process.
According to the court records, Ford indicated on his Sweet Home job application that he had attended the University of Alaska, but had actually attended the Alaska Department of Public Safety Academy — an institution that dismissed Ford from its program.
In a letter to Ford explaining his dismissal, police academy officials said they were expelling Ford for “intentionally (giving) false and misleading statements” to academy staff during an inquiry into the disappearance of a bicycle.