A federal judge in Pennsylvania has denied the U.S. Department of Justice's request that he censor his own ruling and remove findings that a police officer was untruthful and “very likely” engaged in racial profiling.

In October, federal prosecutors asked U.S. District Judge Barclay Surrick of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania to reissue his opinion suppressing evidence from a 2017 traffic stop of two Hispanic men on the Pennsylvania Turnpike by Pennsylvania State Trooper Thomas Fleisher. In its motion for reconsideration, the DOJ said it was not asking the judge to reconsider his suppression ruling, but instead requesting that he issue a new opinion with any references to the trooper's racial profiling and dishonesty removed.

“The government believes that a re-examination of the record would show that those statements are not fair conclusions given the evidence adduced at the hearing,” the DOJ said in its motion. “We respectfully request this court to reconsider its statements concerning racial profiling and the trooper's credibility, and issue a new memorandum without those statements for the following reasons: (1) this court's suppression ruling did not require or depend in any way on a credibility determination; (2) the statements regarding racial profiling and the trooper's credibility create an indelible, and unfair, impression that his testimony was deliberately false and misleading and that he acted out of racial animus; and (3) the memorandum's statements regarding racial profiling and negative credibility have severe professional consequences for a dedicated law enforcement officer.”

Surrick rejected this request in a one-page order Jan. 17.

The DOJ's effort was opposed by the Pennsylvania chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, both of which filed a proposed amicus brief in the case last month, saying the DOJ's motion for reconsideration ”makes no attempt to meet the stringent standard for hiding from the public information illuminating one of the most fraught issues of our day: the role of racial prejudice and false testimony in the criminal justice system.”

“Rather than commit to rooting out racial bias in law enforcement, it asks the court to conceal it. Rather than disavow reliance on law enforcement officers who are less than scrupulously truthful, it asks the court to protect one. Rather than support the law enforcement community's efforts to discipline officers who violate their oath to support and defend our constitution, it asks the court to ensure that this officer remain on the force, and in the courts. Rather than affirm its commitment to seeking justice rather than obtaining convictions, it asks the court to facilitate future due process violations. And rather than acknowledge the salutary effect of daylight on the criminal justice system, it asks the court to shroud its findings in darkness—in derogation of the First Amendment and the public interest,” the amicus brief said.

According to Surrick's Sept. 26 memorandum opinion, the vehicle driven by defendant Pedro Ramon Payano was not his and Fleisher claimed that after running the car's license plate through the computer, the owner, Payano's friend Pablo Anton Rijos Velez, came up listed as a suspect for “license fraud.” However, Surrick said in his opinion that Fleisher's decision to pull over Payano was “very likely” racially motivated, a finding the judge said was bolstered by Fleisher's remark that the car's passengers were not wearing “suits or any kind of business attire” while traveling from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh and that the type of car Payano was driving was typical of those use by drug traffickers.

Payano's attorney, Elizabeth Toplin of the Federal Community Defender Office, did not return a call seeking comment on the denial of the DOJ's motion for reconsideration, nor did Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Jordan.

In a December press release, Reggie Shuford, executive director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania, called the motion for reconsideration “a naked attempt by the Department of Justice to hide misconduct by a law enforcement officer.”

“If a state trooper is engaged in misconduct, the public needs to know that. Public transparency improves policing and holds officers accountable to the oath they took to the Constitution,” Shuford said in the release.

Surrick's opinion was in response to Payano's motion to exclude from evidence a kilogram of cocaine found in his possession during the traffic stop, arguing that the stop and the extended roadside interrogation was not legally justified.

In that opinion, Surrick also remained skeptical of Fleisher's version of what happened during the stop.

“Trooper Fleisher's credibility is called into question when his testimony during the hearing is compared to the actual dash-cam footage, which reveals Trooper Fleisher's various embellishments and mischaracterizations of the traffic stop,” the judge said.

According to Surrick, Fleisher followed Payano for 14 miles before pulling him over. “He either was waiting for the Ford Focus to commit a traffic violation, or was mulling over whether 'suspected license fraud' was enough to justify the stop,” Surrick said.

Surrick denied the admission of the cocaine into evidence, and prosecutors were ultimately forced to drop the case.