Aurora cop fired and decertified after alleged intoxicated incidents

An Aurora police officer was fired and disqualified from law enforcement work this year after he was detained and arrested while allegedly under the influence in separate incidents Adams County Sheriff s Office deputies first responded to a call for amenity at the home of Jason Stanfield-Parker in August according to court documents and Aurora Police Department disciplinary records requested by the Post Deputies detected Stanfield-Parker and his spouse intoxicated His spouse was also identified to be violating a protection order When deputies tried to detain Stanfield-Parker for questioning he walked away and had to be physically taken into custody resulting in an injury Aurora police wrote Stanfield-Parker was brought to a hospital and circulated on a summons for obstructing a peace officer While on paid administrative leave from the department in September Stanfield-Parker encountered law enforcement officers again outside of an Arapahoe County liquor store where he almost caused a traffic crash while reversing out of a parking space He was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol and his breath-alcohol concentration was tested at He was also carrying a firearm at the time Aurora police wrote The state s community Peace Officer Standards and Training database indicates Stanfield-Parker was sentenced in the former circumstance Oct resulting in his decertification March He was charged with DUI and a traffic violation in the second episode pleading not guilty to both charges March Related Articles Aurora man sentenced to years for killing friend hiding remains in crawl space Aurora middle school pupil seriously injured in stabbing police say Aurora police revamped SWAT operations after killing unarmed man last year Aurora police trying to ID skeletal remains discovered near I- Aurora drive-by shooting started with illegal alcohol sale police say Each occurrence also resulted in an internal affairs assessment on Jan police Chief Todd Chamberlain upheld findings that Stanfield-Parker violated the department s policies on off-duty firearm possession conformance to law conduct unbecoming and neglect of duty firing him in each event Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day