Former U. officer who showed colleagues explicit photos of Lauren McCluskey fired by Logan police


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LOGAN — Miguel Deras, the former University of Utah police officer accused of showing explicit photos of Lauren McCluskey to other officers, has been fired from the Logan Police Department.

Friday, Logan police released a brief statement saying Deras’ employment “has ended effective immediately.”

Deras was a probationary employee, according to Logan police. He was released following a “thorough internal review of the recently completed Department of Public Safety investigation. The investigation concluded Deras mishandled sensitive evidence pertaining to the Lauren McCluskey extortion and subsequent homicide case while he was still employed with the University of Utah Police Department,” according to the statement.

“The conclusions drawn in the DPS report are inconsistent with the high expectations and standards placed upon our officers by the community and our department. Our continuing efforts to hold sacred the public’s trust and our duty to serve has resulted in today’s decision.”

The decision to terminate Deras’ employment comes two days after an independent review conducted by the Utah Department of Public Safety concluded that Deras showed pictures of McCluskey to other officers, allegedly under the guise of seeking advice on what to do with them. However, he showed the pictures when multiple officers were around, in addition to his supervisor, in places such as a hallway, and in one case showed another officer a picture on the night of McCluskey’s murder near the murder scene.

McCluskey was shot and killed on campus on Oct. 22, 2018, by Melvin Shawn Rowland, 37, a registered sex offender and Utah State Prison parolee, after weeks of being stalked and harassed by Rowland and threatened with blackmail.

McCluskey sent Deras explicit pictures to show how she was being blackmailed. He accessed those on work email through his phone. While the report concluded that he did not download or digitally share those files with anyone else, Jill McCluskey. Lauren’s mother, said that doesn’t matter because it was still on Deras’ phone which he used to show others.

“The DPS report shows that officer Miguel Deras accessed the photo email attachments unnecessarily on his phone multiple times. UU Police Chief Rodney Chatman stated that the report found no evidence that Deras downloaded the picture files, but of course that is irrelevant to him being able to view them whenever he wanted on his phone. He showed the photos to other officers on at least four occasions, including to the officer in charge after receiving them, at a meeting where he walked around a table with multiple officers showing pictures to each one of them, in a hallway where inappropriate comments were made, and at the scene of Lauren’s murder, which is especially hurtful,” she said in the statement.

“Deras’ egregious misconduct in betraying a victim’s trust by displaying private evidence photos to officers who are not involved in the investigation is a crime,” she said in a statement. ”The University of Utah continues to mislead, continues to cover up the facts and continues to fail to take responsibility for the murder of our daughter.”

The firing of Deras also came a day after students rallied at the University of Utah calling for the former U. officer to be fired and University police to be disbanded.

Deras’ attorneys have maintained their client’s innocence all along, even after the Department of Public Safety report was released.

“This report ... roundly corroborates officer Deras’ account of events,” attorney Jeremy Jones said in a prepared statement. “Contrary to the prior reporting, Deras did not inappropriately download images to his phone. He did not electronically share them with another officer. ... He is not, nor has he ever been, a boogeyman.

“He acted appropriately at every turn,” Jones said.

In May, Logan Police Chief Gary Jensen asked for the public’s patience as the allegations were looked into. He said at the time that he hoped the allegations were not true, but if they were he would not defend him.

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Pat Reavy is a longtime police and courts reporter. He joined the KSL.com team in 2021, after many years of reporting at the Deseret News and KSL NewsRadio before that.

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