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Denver mayor apologizes after detective says he harassed her

In this frame grab from video taken on Jan. 15 and provided by KMGH-TV in Denver, police Detective Leslie Branch-Wise displays text messages she says she received from Mayor Michael Hancock in 2012 when she was a member of his security detail. Hancock apologized Tuesday after Branch-Wise accused him of making inappropriate comments and sending her harassing texts.

The Associated Press

DENVER – Denver Mayor Michael Hancock apologized Tuesday after a former member of his security detail accused him of making inappropriate comments and sending her harassing text messages in 2012.

Police Detective Leslie Branch-Wise told KMGH-TV that in one text, Hancock complimented her haircut and wrote, “You made it hard on a brotha to keep it correct every day.” In another text, he mentioned that he spotted her on television in the crowd at a Denver Nuggets basketball game and said, “You look sexy in all that black.”

“I just want people to know that I’m a woman, I have children and I’m a victim of sexual harassment,” said Branch-Wise, who was on the security detail in 2011 and 2012. “It made me physically sick. It was extremely scary.”

Hancock

Hancock told KMGH he doesn’t think his behavior constituted sexual harassment, but he now realizes it was inappropriate. He also apologized to Branch-Wise, his wife, his children and to the city of Denver, saying he was wrong to send the messages.

“Six years ago, when Detective Leslie Branch-Wise was on my detail, we became friends and I blurred the lines between being a friend and being a boss,” he said. “Our text exchanges became too casual, too familiar, and last week I learned, after six years, that they hurt her and offended her. ... I am here to accept the responsibility for that and to apologize.”

Branch-Wise, who said she does not intend to file a harassment claim, first raised allegations of sexual harassment in 2012 against one of Hancock’s aides, who was fired four days later. The aide then sued for wrongful termination and ultimately settled with the city for $200,000.

Branch-Wise, who reached a $75,000 settlement with the city, now says she regrets not holding the mayor accountable as well.

“If you are down here and your boss is up here and he’s showering you with these inappropriate texts and sayings and making you feel uncomfortable, who do you tell if he’s at the top?” she said. “It’s crushing.”

She said that she also worries about retaliation in her current job as a Denver police detective, although Hancock indicated that she has nothing to fear.

“She has served our city well as a Denver police officer. She continues to serve our city well,” he said. “There’s no revenge here. I hope to apologize to her, if she will allow me to do that. The city is not interested in retaliation. I’m interested in taking responsibility.”

Hancock has been Denver’s mayor since 2011.