Ohio police chief seen putting KKK note on Black officer’s desk retires

An Ohio police chief seen in a surveillance video putting a note saying “Ku Klux Klan” on a Black officer’s desk has retired

SHEFFIELD LAKE, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio police chief seen in a surveillance video putting a note saying “Ku Klux Klan” and a jacket displayed like a KKK robe and hood on a Black officer’s desk has retired.

Anthony Campo resigned shortly after Sheffield Lake Mayor Dennis Bring confronted him on Tuesday.

No publicly available telephone numbers were found for Campo to seek his comment on Friday.

Bring learned what happened from the city law director after the police union representing the officer filed a harassment complaint. The video, which did not include sound, shows Campo and the officer talking briefly after the officer discovered the note and jacket on his desk.

Bring said Campo, who is white, told him it was supposed to be a prank. Bring called it “embarrassing and disgusting.”

Campo was a Sheffield Lake police officer for 33 years and chief for the last eight. The Black officer has been with the department less than a year.

Bring said he and the officer cried during a conversation about what happened.

"I apologized to him," Bring told cleveland.com. "This is not a mistake. This is something so egregious I can't describe it."

Sheffield Lake is roughly 27 miles (43.45 kilometers) west of downtown Cleveland.