Southampton Village Reaches Settlement With Suspended Officer; Another Employee Suspended - 27 East

Southampton Village Reaches Settlement With Suspended Officer; Another Employee Suspended

icon 1 Photo
Southampton Village Hall.  BRENDAN J. O'REILLY

Southampton Village Hall. BRENDAN J. O'REILLY

authorCailin Riley on Jul 13, 2022

In a short special meeting on Wednesday, July 6, the Southampton Village Board voted to suspend one employee and to settle with another who has been suspended for more than half a year.

In a 4-0 vote — with a notable abstention from Mayor Jesse Warren — the board agreed on a settlement with Southampton Village Police Officer Lee Pulliam, who was suspended in January after he was charged with trespassing in his neighbor’s home a few weeks earlier, on Christmas Eve, in their Manorville neighborhood.

According to Suffolk County Police, Pulliam unlawfully entered his neighbor’s home on Windcrest Drive through an unlocked door without permission shortly before 9 p.m. Suffolk County Police charged Pulliam, 34 at the time, with second-degree criminal trespass, a misdemeanor, on January 18. The Village Board suspended him a week later.

Village Trustees Gina Arresta, Bill Manger, Robin Brown and Roy Stevenson all voted in favor of the settlement in the public portion of the July 6 meeting, after coming out of a closed-door executive session.

Village officials would not release the stipulation of settlement, saying the village counsel had advised them not to do so until the settlement was signed by both parties, but Warren said the settlement includes, in part, that Pulliam would agree to give up all his banked vacation time and agree to a “last chance” clause, meaning if he engaged in any improper conduct going forward, he would lose his job.

Warren said he expected that Pulliam would return to work as soon as the settlement was signed.

During the public portion of the meeting, Warren offered an explanation for why he abstained from voting.

“I do not have all the facts needed to make this decision,” he said at the meeting, adding that he had not heard from the hearing officer that was appointed to handle the case. He said that not having enough information to make a decision is “an appropriate reason” for abstaining.

He also expressed some frustration with the entire process and how it ultimately ended in a settlement after seven months.

“This board could have been in a situation where we could have settled earlier on instead of having it drawn out,” he said. “If we were going to settle, I wish we had settled early on instead of taking so long.”

Southampton Village PBA President Michael Horstman said earlier this week that he would not be able to comment on the settlement or disclose any of the terms until it was signed by both parties.

Like the Pulliam settlement, there was not much in the way of details offered by village officials in another personnel move, the suspension of Paul Murphy. After coming out of executive session, the board voted unanimously, in the first of two walk-on resolutions, to suspend the Highway Department supervisor without pay for 30 days.

Additional details about why Murphy was suspended were not provided.

You May Also Like:

Longtime Pillars of East Quogue Community Retire From Civic Association

Back in the mid-1990s, Anne Algieri was at the forefront of a grassroots campaign in ... 11 May 2025 by Cailin Riley

Express Sessions: The South Fork's Bounty, on Land and at Sea

The latest in the Express Sessions panel discussion series, “ The South Fork’s Bounty, on ... 10 May 2025 by Editorial Board

Hard Decisions Could Lie Ahead for Local Restaurants, Businesses as They Brace for Higher Tariffs

In a matter of weeks, harvest season will begin across the region, kicking off a ... by Michelle Trauring

Under Siege

Our Sag Harbor park tennis courts are under siege. There are eight clay courts and two hard courts. Information was just given at the start of the season that the hard courts will be given over to pickleball, as they were last season, but will be resurfaced and used only for pickleball — not to be shared for tennis, also. Two of the now eight clay courts, on the upper level, are to be paved this summer, I was told, so that the high school teams can use hard courts for practice in fall and spring. The timing of this ... by Staff Writer

Not the Best Day

So, the person who concocted the recent traffic experiment says it was “the best day yet” [“After Southampton Traffic Experiment Victory Lap, Talk Turns to Long-Term Possibilities,” 27east.com, May 7]. Obviously he didn’t drive anywhere between 3 and 7 p.m. those two weeks. We live off South Magee Street and could not go west at 4 p.m., because there were no left turns on County Road 39 from South Magee, nor could we turn right onto Hill Street. We had to drive the back roads to get to the intersection of North Sea Road and County Road 39, which was ... by Staff Writer

Miracle Space-Age Fabrics of the 1980s

I fractured my patella in March. I was skiing in Colorado. As I stood up from the chairlift, the top of my kneecap broke away. Crazy, right? We couldn’t figure out how it happened. One doctor thought my thigh muscles were so strong, they pulled the bone apart. Those millions of squats I’ve done in the past must have given me the quadriceps of 10 men. But can the quadriceps of 10 men break a bone? If so, are they strong enough to lift a car? Lifting a car would be bad-expletive. Since it happened at the top of the ... by Tracy Grathwohl

Going Nuclear

“Governor [Kathy] Hochul is making a major push to not only build new nuclear plants in New York State but to make New York the center of a nuclear revival in the U.S.,” declared Mark Dunlea, chair of the Green Education and Legal Fund, and long a leader on environmental issues in the state and nationally, in a recent email calling on support to “stop Hochul’s nuclear push.” Dunlea is author of the book “Putting Out the Planetary Fire: An Introduction to Climate Change and Advocacy.” An Albany Law School graduate, he co-founded both the New York Public Interest Research ... by Karl Grossman

Car Destroyed by Fire in Water Mill Friday Morning

The Southampton Fire Department was called out to a car fire in Water Mill on ... 9 May 2025 by Staff Writer

A Lifeline, Threatened: Local Head Start Programs Carry On Under Pressure

A group of small children clamored together on the thick navy blue carpet in a ... by Cailin Riley

The Future of Farming, with Amanda Merrow of Amber Waves | 27Speaks Podcast

In the spring of 2008, Amanda Merrow and Katie Baldwin met for the first time ... 8 May 2025 by 27Speaks