It's late on a Friday night in downtown St. Paul, and Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher is holding forth on chicken wings, Roy Wilkins Auditorium and the origins of the bar he's watching from a parked squad.
Welcome to Fletcher's Facebook livestream where, since August, the sheriff and part-time crime analyst Pat Scott have gone out most Friday nights, a video camera fixed to their squad's dashboard to livestream on Facebook whatever passes in front of them. It's a popular fix for Fletcher's fans, hundreds of whom tune in each week to hear his thoughts and watch some occasional police work.
But the show has rankled members of the Ramsey County Board. A host of budget problems last year that required county intervention, coupled with allegations of racism this year from eight Black or brown correctional officers, have spurred commissioners to plan a public discussion about the Sheriff's Office. They want to see if residents feel the department needs improvement on issues of trust, transparency and accountability, Board Chairwoman Toni Carter said.
"The show," she added, "is not what we're looking for."
Fletcher, who did not respond to a request for comment on this story, has had a testy relationship with the board since he was elected in 2018 to his second go-round as sheriff.
After months of disputes last year, the county covered his $950,000 budget overrun. Fletcher angered then-Board Chairman Jim McDonough when he rehired two employees the county had fired for misconduct; after arbitration, it cost the county nearly $100,000 to terminate the men.
Then Fletcher raised eyebrows when it was revealed that he and several of his top-ranked officers take a law enforcement pension on top of their salaries. That's legal, but in at least two cases Sheriff's Office managers have resigned only to be hired back once they had been gone long enough to trigger their pensions.
Courting controversy is nothing new for Fletcher, one of the longest-serving elected leaders in Ramsey County. Since he was first elected to the St. Paul City Council in the 1980s as a 26-year-old St. Paul police officer, Fletcher has cultivated a reputation as a street-smart politician with a long memory of who's supported him and who hasn't.