Crime & Safety
Mensah Duty Fitness Improperly Evaluated after Shooting: Expert
Third and final Jay Anderson John Doe hearing reveals numerous inconsistencies and questionable actions by Wauwatosa Police Department.

WAUWATOSA, WIβThe final day of the John Doe hearing into the 2016 shooting of Jay Anderson Jr., 25, by former Wauwatosa officer Joseph Mensah left lingering questions. Among the people who took the stand was Wauwatosa Police Chief Barry Weber, who is set to retire by June. Weber was compelled to testify after a motion to quash a subpoena requesting his testimony was rejected during the last John Doe hearing.
Lawyers representing the chief had argued that Weber wouldnβt have relevant knowledge of the shooting investigation, which was led by the Milwaukee Police Department (MPD). State law has requires that police shooting investigations not be led by the agency involved in the incident. MPD led the investigation into the Anderson shooting as part of the Milwaukee Area Investigative Team (MAIT), a network of investigators which includes Wauwatosa personnel.
Jay Anderson Jr.
Attorney Kimberley Motley used the first hearing to highlight the Wauwatosa Police Departmentβs (WPD) involvement in the Anderson investigation. WPD detectives canvassed the surrounding area for witnesses days after the shooting. The reports they authored undermined Weberβs arguments that his department wasnβt involved in the investigation.
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One of those detectives was Joseph Roy, who was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in 2020 and now helps oversee the open records division. Roy testified that he had conducted his canvases for witnesses at the direction of a WPD detective-lieutenant who was his superior at the time. WPD also collected footage from the nearby Madison Elementary Schoolβs security cameras which may have captured Mensah entering the lot.
Once Weber took the stand, Motley honed in on several points involving Mensahβs career and the general policies and procedures at WPD. On numerous occasions Weber stated he didnβt recall, or didnβt know the answers to questions. These included when exactly Weber approved a medal of valor that Mensah received in August 2016 for his conduct in an incident that included his first shooting about a year before. The medal was awarded while Mensahβs shooting of Anderson was being investigated by the Milwaukee County District Attorney. Both shootings were ruled justified by the district attorney. Mensah went on to become involved in another shooting before resigning from WPD in November 2020.
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Jay Anderson Sr. and Linda Anderson speak with press after the meeting was over.
Weber also testified about WPDβs policies around fitness for duty following an officer-involved shooting. βBefore weβd allow him to come back, I would send him to a psychologist that we use to determine in that personβs professional opinion, that heβs able to return,β said Weber. However, when asked if such fitness for duty protocols were written policies within WPD, Weber stated, βIt may be included in some other policy. Iβm not sure β¦ I donβt think we have a fitness for duty policy as a stand-alone.β
WPDβs chief was also unsure what policy might include the fitness for duty standards. And although Weber has been a member of the International Associations of Chiefs since 1984 he testified that he didnβt know the organizationβs standards for fitness for duty. βI donβt know what their standard is,β said Weber, adding that, βthe IACP, as theyβre known, thinks theyβre the expert on everything. One size does not fit all for every organization. So I donβt necessarily look at what ISAP does. I look at whatβs best for our organization.β
William Harmening, an expert witness who testified in the first John Doe hearing, returned for his final appearance. Harmening expressed concern about the chiefβs disregard for widely regarded standards for fitness for duty and psychological evaluation. βIt causes me a bit of distress that this, apparently, is a department that has no procedures in place for this process and does not recognize the national standards.β
Harmening, with 37 years of law enforcement experience, stressed that fitness for duty evaluations are βnot something thatβs taken lightly. Itβs a very complex and a very structured process, with specific guidelines.β It involves interviews and psychological testing, designed to detect any post-incident psychological issues an officer may be experiencing. Harmening also highlighted that the reviews are also designed to catch officers who may be attempting to pass themselves off as fine in order to return to work.
Prior to his testimony, Harmening got the opportunity to review Mensahβs employee file, which Motley obtained from WPD. However, the file was missing several key documents including routine performance evaluations, proper fitness for duty evaluations, or academy-related evaluations. βNone,β Harmening emphasized. Rather than fitness for duty evaluations, Harmening noted, heβd viewed letters written by sociologists and others who were not psychologists or psychiatrists and were unqualified to evaluate Mensah following his shootings.
A battle just to obtain documents
Obtaining Mensahβs personnel file and other documents, including WPDβs unredacted traffic-stop training, was a challenge for Motley. The records werenβt handed over until just days before the hearing on May 4. Additionally, a deposition Motley had scheduled with Mayor Dennis McBride regarding the ongoing lawsuits over the October curfew was not attended by McBride or his lawyers.
During a meeting with Yamahiro on April 30, it was revealed that lawyers representing Wauwatosa were concerned about sensitive documents being published on the internet. On March 17, Wisconsin Examiner published WPDβs operational plan for the curfew which, like numerous records released in January, was fully unredacted.
In a statement to Wisconsin Examiner McBride asserted that, βI was ready to testify on April 23. I am eager to do so, confident that my testimony will refute the plaintiffsβ allegations, which have no legal and factual merit,β the mayor said. βUnfortunately, because attorney Motley has consistently released documents on the internet and elsewhere β which contain personal information of Police and Fire Commission members and government officials and details about law enforcement operations and security protocol β the City was forced to seek a protective order.β He added, βUntil the court rules on our motion for a protective order at a hearing on May 7, the cityβs attorney has instructed me not to testify. As soon as the court issues its decision, I will sit for a deposition.β
The Anderson shooting doesnβt add up
Both Harmening and Ricky Burems, a former MPD homicide detective who retired in 2014, were critical of Mensahβs actions. Harmening noted that the underlying βcrimeβ which initiated Mensahβs contact with Anderson βwas at most, a minor ordinance violation.β In June 2016, Anderson was approached by Mensah as he slept in his car in a local park at 3 a.m. Andersonβs loved ones have repeatedly stated that heβd pulled over to sleep off intoxication rather than drive home.
Shortly after pulling into the lot, Mensah called in Andersonβs license plate number. Motley noted that this meant Mensah must have, at some point, been behind Andersonβs vehicle since the car lacked a front plate. However, Mensah parked his squad car in front of Anderonβs car, which is directly contrary to WPDβs traffic-stop training.
βIβve done thousands of traffic stops,β testified Burems. βIβve never done it like this. Iβve never seen anybody do it like this. This is not trained. A traffic stop is always done with the front of your vehicle facing the rear of the target vehicle.β Burems added that, βfrom the standpoint of policing, from the standpoint of safety, from the standpoint of trained procedure, there is no productive reason that he would do this.β In his own experience, βif an officer was seen doing this in Milwaukee they would be admonished. And if they continued doing it, they would lose their job.β
Mensah shined his squadβs bright takedown lights on the vehicle. Those are separate from the red and blue emergency lights, which wouldβve activated the dash camera. Less than 30 seconds of mute footage captures the encounter. By then, Mensah had his gun raised and Anderson, still in the car, had his hands raised. Mensah claimed he drew his gun after noticing a pistol sitting beside Anderson on the passenger seat. His hands lowered several times before Mensah fired several shots into Andersonβs head and neck area.
Before MPD took over the investigation, WPD officers had done several things to the scene. Andersonβs gun, which was allegedly on the seat, was removed from the car and taken to a WPD squad. Next, Anderson himself was removed from the car and his pockets searched. Although Mensah claimed Anderson didnβt have identification, an officer who searched Andersonβs body provided an I.D to MPD detectives.
The officer later stated he couldnβt remember which pocket heβd found the I.D, and that the gun was removed because he couldnβt see Andersonβs facial wounds, and thought Anderson could still reach for it.
βIn my opinion as a former police officer and detective, police agencies are unable to objectively investigate their own shootings,β Burems testified on the stand. βAnd you do see it, you see the reasons right here in this investigation. Because the only thing that the Wauwatosa Police Department should have done was to secure the scene. To make sure it was not disturbed, to make sure that it stayed in the same condition that it was in when the crime occurred. And to administer any type of aid to Jay Anderson.
Thatβs the only thing they should have done. There was no reason to move the gun. There was no reason to allow Mensah to manipulate his vehicle. There was no reason for them to go to Madison Elementary to obtain video, because video can be tampered with. There was no reason for them to do any type of canvas, because you donβt even want to create the possibility that there could be some improprieties . and some bias. But you see it here in this investigation.β
Harmening stated that due to the WPD officerβs actions, the scene evidence had been tainted. Other questions also surrounded MPDβs observations that Menshahβs red and blue lights were on once they arrived and the takedown lights were deactivated. βDo we know what time his red and blue lights were turned on?β Motley asked Harmening, who replied, βNo.β βBut we just know that theyβre just magically on when the Milwaukee investigative team was there?β She continued, to which Harmining responded, βThat is correct.β
Activating the red and blue lights for a traffic stop would have been more consistent with WPDβs training and would have activated the dash camera when Mensah initiated the stop.
Burems, who has conducted many shooting investigations over his police career, noted the lack of blood on the passenger seat doesnβt seem to support Mensahβs claims that Anderson lunged for a gun. Earlier in that dayβs testimony, Weber and Motley sparred over inconsistent statements Weber has made regarding the shooting.
In a letter recommending that the Waukesha sheriff hire Mensah Weber wrote that, βMensah was confronted by a person who was arrested, and refused to put down their weapon.β Motley asked where Weber heard that Anderson ever βrefused to put down his weapon.β She continued, βthat means that he was touching it and that he refused to put it down.β
Weber simply repeated, βI consider Anderson armed. He had that weapon right next to him, within his reach. And was reaching for that weapon. He was an armed subject, and he refused to follow the officerβs instructions.β After a brief interjection by the judge, Weber admitted that he didnβt recall Mensah ever telling him Anderson touched the gun. Weber was also confronted with his statements in an unrelated Feb. 25 deposition that the gun was on the console, not the passenger seat.
Both Harmining and Burmes had their own perspectives and concerns as it related to how the Anderson shooting and investigation played out. Burems agreed on the stand that Anderson was not a threat to Mensah. βDo you believe that there is probable cause to charge officer Mensah with second-degree recklessly endangering safety?β Motley asked, to which Burems replied, βYes.β Closing arguments into the Anderson John Doe case will be heard on May 19.
This story originally appeared in The Wisconsin Examiner.