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IOWA CITY, Iowa: The longtime president of the Des Moines police officers’ union sent explicit photos to four female colleagues but retired before he could face discipline and wasn’t criminally charged, the city confirmed late Tuesday.
In a lawsuit filed Tuesday, four Des Moines Police Department employees alleged that they were sent unsolicited photos by Des Moines Police Bargaining Unit Association President Stew Barnes in 2019 and 2020, including many of himself naked.
The department let Barnes, 61, retire in August 2020 with full benefits despite overwhelming evidence of his harassment of co-workers and employees of a tanning salon and a credit union, the lawsuit claims. Department leaders recognized him at a retirement banquet in October 2020.
Iowa law allows the state pension system to deny retirement benefits to members who are not in good standing, including those who face pending disciplinary proceedings for misconduct. The lawsuit argues that Barnes should have been disqualified from benefits and faced a criminal investigation, alleging he was using police resources to find and stalk women and that his victims were ready to cooperate.
It sends the message that you can sexually harass someone and walk away and retire if you are at the end of your career, said Des Moines attorney Jill Zwagerman, who is representing the women.
Barnes had worked as an officer at the department since 1994 and led the nearly 300-member union since 2001.
A statement issued Tuesday evening through the city managers office defended the department and the citys handling of the internal investigation but did not explain the lack of a criminal investigation.
Consistent with state and federal law, when the City became aware of the behavior, the City immediately and thoroughly investigated the allegations and took all necessary remedial steps, the statement said.
Barnes confirmed to have sent the inappropriate photos and resigned his job before the inquiry concluded, the statement said. Police Chief Dana Wingert later determined the misconduct occurred and that it would have been a fireable offense.
Contrary to plaintiffs’ complaints, the City does not have the authority to prevent the offending officer from resigning or receiving pension benefits, the statement said, adding that decisions on benefits fall to the Municipal Fire and Police Retirement System of Iowa.
The lawsuit alleges that the departments handling of the case is part of a sexually hostile culture that needs to change.
The lawsuit names the department and the city of Des Moines as defendants and alleges gender discrimination, sexual harassment and retaliation in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act. In addition to three officers and a digital evidence specialist who say Barnes harassed them, a fifth woman alleges she has been passed over for promotions because of her gender.
The lawsuit claims that female employees are routinely subjected to sexist comments, unwanted advances and other demeaning behavior by male officers. The plaintiffs say they have been punished for filing complaints, while offending male officers get promotions or can quietly retire or resign.
The plaintiffs include senior police officer Tracy Rhoads, who says she has faced sexual harassment from male employees since she was hired in 1997. She alleges Barnes approached her in 2019, saying, Get a load of this, before scrolling through his phone and showing her pictures of his penis and others in which he was naked.
She and other women say that Barnes was relentless, continuing his harassment long after they told him to stop. Barnes pressured the women to participate in bets in which the loser would have to do naked dares” and send photos, the lawsuit claims. Barnes sent photos of himself without clothes while riding a lawnmower and raking leaves, the suit says.
Barnes repeatedly told one officer that she needed to settle a bet over a football game by going skinny dipping in a pool frequented by officers, and sent her photos of himself naked on a raft in the pool. He allegedly told her that he was aroused thinking about what he could to do her.
The women say they were reluctant to report Barnes behavior because they feared alienating their union and had faced retaliation from the administration for prior complaints.
The city’s statement faulted the women for failing to immediately report the misconduct as is required of all employees by policy.
After Rhoads came forward in August 2020, she asked the assistant chief about the status of the inquiry days later. The lawsuit claims that he told her it was done because Barnes had quit, without looking up from the television he was watching.
One department official told an employee who received nude photos from Barnes that she should be happy he was gone rather than critical of the lack of accountability, the lawsuit says.
But the department’s problems continued. Just last month, another office resigned after making inappropriate comments to Rhoads and about another woman in front of superior officers, the lawsuit says.
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