Officers' disciplinary records are secret under state law, city officials say. Blake said he expects to be told the outcome by the police watchdog group that brought the case, but it's not a right.
"That I'm not entirely entitled to know what happens when it involved me just makes no sense," Blake told The Associated Press. "Something needs to change."
Lawyers for the police watchdog group prosecuting the case recommended Frascatore forfeit 10 vacation days as a punishment. The trial judge makes a recommendation about the punishment, but the police commissioner decides what punishment, if any, is handed out.
The mayor and the former police commissioner publicly apologized to the ex-tennis star after his bogus arrest. Blake, who has a black father and a white mother, said 10 days of lost vacation was laughable and called on the mayor and the commissioner to fire Frascatore, who's white, and to make the decision public. He said it's especially important to send a message to communities of color.
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Blake, as the complaining witness, would be entitled to a general idea of the conclusion of the case. In the past year, the police watchdog, the Civilian Complaint Review Board, started sending letters updating complaining witnesses on the police commissioner's rulings.
Yesterday, Frascatore's attorney Stephen Worth argued that Frascatore "took extreme care" when arresting Blake. Frascatore has said he was told Blake may be armed with a knife.
"He took him down in the most minimally invasive way he could," Worth said.
But an attorney for the Civilian Complaint Review Board, Jonathan Fogel, said the violence was extreme and unnecessary. "Where does it stop? This unprovoked violence has no place in society," he said.
"I can speak up and ask them to set an example," he said of city officials. "I hope they do.