State police: Leader’s departure not Charlottesville-related
RICHMOND, Va. — The superintendent of the Virginia State Police announced his retirement Tuesday after decades of service, a move an agency spokeswoman said was unrelated to this summer’s violent white nationalist rally in Charlottesville.
Authorities have faced unrelenting criticism for their handling of the rally, and Col. W. Steven Flaherty’s retirement marks the third announcement in two days of the departure of a top public official with a role in responding. But state police spokeswoman Corinne Geller said Flaherty had been planning to step down at the end of Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s administration.
“Having the opportunity to serve in the capacity of Superintendent these past 14 years and three months has truly been the greatest honour of my life,” Flaherty, who has more than 42 years with the agency, said in a statement. Flaherty, 64, was appointed superintendent by then-Gov. Mark Warner in October 2003.
The city of Charlottesville announced earlier Tuesday that City Attorney Craig Brown will be leaving at the end of January. And Charlottesville Police Chief Al Thomas, 50, announced his retirement Monday after less than two years on the job.