Posted on 05/13/2007 12:15:31 PM PDT by radar101
The clash between LAPD officers and demonstrators at a May 1 immigration rally will likely result in multimillion-dollar legal judgments that will be a "waste" of taxpayer dollars, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said today.
The mayor's comments came during an appearance on KNBC and nearly two weeks after a televised altercation showed police wielding batons and firing rubber bullets at protestors and journalists in MacArthur Park.
As the LAPD and Police Commission investigate the melee, the city has asked participants and witnesses to come forward with information and any video or photos. Villaraigosa said evidence provided by bystanders will be a key element in the city's investigations, as well as civil suits he expects will result.
Two class-action suits have already been filed against the LAPD in U.S. District Court, alleging violation of demonstrators' civil rights.
He refused to be pinned down on how much he believes the litigation will cost the city, but estimated it will soar into the millions.
The judgments, he said, will be a "waste of taxpayers' money," with the city already struggling to balance its budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1.
Villaraigosa also repeated his promise that he and Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton will investigate every aspect of the altercation
"We're going to get to the bottom of the situation because we have to," the mayor said.
At the same time, the mayor vowed that he won't allow a witch hunt against the officers assigned to MacArthur Park on May 1.
"We're going to protect the rights of officers, who put their lives on the line every day," he said. "When an officer goes beyond law, beyond tactical training, beyond common sense, they have to be responsible like the rest of us."
He also said the investigators will look at the role of every command official and officer involved in the day's events.
"Historically, it's always been line officer who's taken the brunt" of the blame, Villaraigosa said. "This is going to change.
At least four investigations - including a civil-rights inquiry by the FBI - have been launched into the clash. The Police Commission is due to report its findings to the City Council at the end of the month.
The council also created a special task force to monitor the city's investigations. It is holding a public hearing at 6 p.m. Monday at Charles White Elementary School 2401 Wilshire Blvd., across from MacArthur Park.
A week after the clash, Bratton demoted Deputy Chief Caylor "Lee" Carter, a 33-year veteran who was the top-ranking commander at MacArthur Park. Carter's second-in-command, Cmdr. Louis Gray, was reassigned from LAPD's Central Division to the Operations Bureau.
At the time, Bratton said the reassignments were a "personnel" rather than "disciplinary" decision.
"I have to be comfortable with the leadership around me," Bratton said.
The 60 officers of Metro Division's B Platoon, who were assigned to crowd control at MacArthur Park, also have been taken off the street.
The officers of the city's elite division were reportedly back at the Police Academy last week, receiving training in crowd control - tactics that sources said the officers had not previously received because they'd been concentrating on crime-suppression duties.
His Hispanic constituents get to sue, and he gets to look good to them.
The LAPD is cut down another notch, and made toothless against any crime committed by "Minorities".
Why anyone is willing to work for the LAPD is beyond me.
Just another step in the Reconquista. The whites are already fleeing, this will just increase the flight. Watch for housing prices to plummet.
But the lawyers will eat well.
SO disgusting. And it is totally up to Villarugosa and Bratton — they could come out in support of the good folks at the LAPD and say that when you break the laws you deal with the consequences. But NO!!!
You are right about that, then LA will be run just like a town in Mexico. Run by thugs, gangs and narco-terrorists.
As has been said, just put up a tall wall around that city & throw your trash into it. That’s whats left.
5/10/2007
When the Last Hero Leaves L.A., Will Anybody Notice?
Filed under: General, Crime Patterico @ 12:02 am
[Editors Note: the following is a piece by Robert C.J. Parry, a freelance writer and a keen observer of local politics and culture. It is the result of months of work chasing down an interesting and important story about the Los Angeles Police Department. All credit for this piece goes to Mr. Parry. Patterico]
Patterico’s Pontifications
http://patterico.com/2007/05/10/when-the-last-hero-leaves-la-will-anybody-notice
By Robert C. J. Parry
Despite the tenor of news reports surrounding last weeks violence in MacArthur Park, many officers in the Los Angeles Police Department are valorous and dedicated. In fact, this morning, 17 current police officers will receive the LAPD Medal of Valor. Notably, three of them now serve in other communities.
In fact, according to the L.A. Police Protective League, fully 60% of LAPD officers have been with the department less than five years. At that rate, almost the entire department could have been replaced twice since the 1992 riots. Notably, officers who leave the LAPD in their first five years have to repay the City for their academy training.
If you want to understand why the LAPD cant retain officers, dont look to the Los Angeles Times. The story below was first told to five of their top staff writers. Each deemed it interesting, but none reported it. In fact, this very column was presented to their OpEd section, and was rejected because a vaguely similar piece ran last year, addressing a less compelling set of facts. Apparently, only limited space is allotted to critical local issues in Los Angeless newspaper of record.
So, instead of looking to the Times, look to two other certified heroes: officers Troy Zeeman and Bryan Gregson. Last November, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger presented them with California Medals of Valor, for engaging a suspected killer in a running gunfight through a South L.A. apartment building.
The LAPD, by contrast, ruled them tactically deficient, worthy only of retraining.
If thats confusing to you, it wasnt to Zeeman and Gregson. Theyd both spent a decade in the LAPD hall of mirrors.
But to get the details, youd have to drive to Newport Beach. Thats where both cops moved months after the shooting.
The Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners (BOPC) official account of the 2005 shooting (available at LAPD Online) provides no reason to consider them anything but courageous. On February 17 of that year, while on patrol in the violent Harbor Gateway area, they spotted gang member Frank Garcia. They knew the 22-year-old Garcia was suspected of having killed a woman with a stray bullet in a late 2003 drive-by shooting. In November of 2004 they arrested him following an extensive search with helicopters and K-9s. He was released when no citizens would testify, Zeeman explained.
Three months later, two hours into a Thursday afternoon shift, they spotted Garcia and other gangsters outside apartments at 227th Street and Harvard Boulevard. He drew their attention by suspiciously hiding behind bushes. They pulled over, he ran trespassing through the apartments and the chase was on.
Since Garcia had a head-start, Gregson ran to the back of the complex while Zeeman chased Garcia into an alcove. Suddenly Garcia shouted, youre dead, and fired a shot around a corner. Miraculously, it missed. Zeeman fired back, and chased Garcia west toward Gregson, who shot and captured the gang member.
As LAPDs official reviewers of lethal force incidents, the members of the BOPC (most of whom have never carried a gun) nit-picked Zeeman and Gregsons actions literally step by step.
They complained the officers didnt make a plan as if Garcia had stood awaiting permission to run. They opined as to what should have been broadcast mid-stride over their radios - berating Gregson for saying 228th Street instead of 227th - and said that they would have preferred that Zeeman had ended the pursuit when Gregson separated. They even complained that Zeeman wasnt broadcasting while shooting. I dropped my radio when I ducked, he explained.
Despite their penchant for second-guessing the officers, the members of the BOPC did not say what they themselves would have done. But cower in fear was not an option for Zeeman and Gregson.
Both cops were ordered to undergo formal re-training at the police academy. They complied and left for Newport Beach within weeks.
Ignoring the nitpicking, Gov. Schwarzenegger presented their medals well after the BOPCs ruling. The shameless LAPD touted their achievement in press releases and other announcements that often failed to mention that neither man continued to hold an LAPD badge. Ironically, the same LAPD brass who attended the ceremony declined to give them department awards because of the BOPCs ruling.
Monday morning quarterbacking is only half of the story. Not discussed in reports or press releases were the things that truly drove them to leave the streets of South L.A. to gangsters like Frank Garcia.
The sergeant who arrived at the scene had questioned them about the incident and separated them per the consent decree standard. But, he never inquired as to their welfare - an inquiry that the consent decree doesnt require. Locked in rooms at Harbor Station, they were treated as suspects in a grueling 14-hour interrogation. Had the location been Guantanamo Bay, civil libertarians would fume.
Zeeman describes being treated this way as accepted, much like he accepted that he would risk his life every day as a cop. What was not accepted was the second-guessing and stress from the politically-driven BOPC.
I was confident that Gregson and I did what the public would expect take a violent gang member off the street, even if it meant putting our lives and family in danger, Zeeman said. But, he added,
I doubted the LAPD, the city officials and the public would deem (it) good. Instead, I felt they would not take into consideration the dangers and the decision to put our lives on the line.
While their supervisors offered support, Zeeman says, they too were driven by the requirements of the federal consent decree that governs almost everything LAPD cops do. It created a constant feeling that doing good, aggressive, honest police work is the slowest way to climb the LAPD ladder.
Being proactive is a liability for the City, said Zeeman. The LAPD, the city officials and the public dont want good cops to do their jobs.
Being proactive, he said, is career suicide.
At the time of the shooting, Zeeman was on the LAPDs High Risk Management List, a watch list of potentially problem officers. If you do good, aggressive police work, you get on the list, he says. Though he had one previous shooting and had engaged in 10 years of violent altercations with resisting suspects, hed never had any citizen complaint sustained for any reason.
Still, hed been on the list for most of his career. As the department became driven more by politics and the consent decree than by common sense, disciplinary procedures became more onerous and simultaneously more meaningless. The department now investigates every single complaint, regardless of plausibility. In one incident, repeated by many cops, an officer was questioned for allegedly stealing a womans ovaries. A 28-year-old officer was investigated for raping a woman every day for 55 years.
It would be a joke, except for this: when a complaint is filed, an officers career goes on hold. Most complaints take a year for the department to investigate, Zeeman says. While its open, you cant promote or transfer. So, gangsters lies and psychotics delusions limit career prospects for certified heroes like Troy Zeeman.
But the part of the system that finally made Zeeman move on was the most humiliating. Although the department never sustained any complaints against him, it also failed to clear some of them. My complaints were mostly for using discourteous language, and most were ruled unresolved, meaning the department couldnt decide between believing me or a felon.
It was one insult too many from a city whose gangsters had twice tried to kill him. So, both cops abandoned their half-vested pensions and found a community that embraces a partnership with its cops: Newport Beach.
In L.A., the complaints and second-guessing create a paranoid ambiance that causes officers to prioritize political perceptions over capturing criminals and even their own safety. I know a lot of cops who dont carry batons, said a South L.A. gang investigator who refused to be identified in print, fearing LAPD retribution. Theyd rather watch a crook run away than risk a fight, he explained. Gangsters ask me why I dont carry one and I say Im not gonna end up on YouTube. If you want to fight me, well do it with fists.
Though he attended the Police Commissions re-training as ordered, Zeeman said most cops dont take the Commission very seriously. He said: their motivation for any decision is job security. Yet that security comes from a mayor who is driven purely by political winds.
So, in their quest to hunt down even the slightest defect in LAPD officers, the members of the Commission have marginalized its influence.
As Zeeman prepared to leave LAPD, his commanding officer pleaded with him to stay, saying she wished she could pay him better. But nothing could possibly convince him to stay. No amount of money would have kept me working in that environment, he said.
To the media, the LAPD story is about secretive personnel hearings and the virtues of the consent decree. One reporter who ignored this story said to me: cops leave the LAPD all the time, whats the big deal? Apparently, a story about certified heroes fleeing the police department does not fit the agenda of the newspaper of record in Americas second largest city.
Like many reporters, that gentleman regularly seeks analysis from police critics like civil rights attorney Connie Rice. Quoted by the Times in 10 stories in as many months, despite having never worked the street, she is deemed credible because she issued Rampart Reconsidered, a report criticizing the departments warrior culture.
On page 47 of that report, which was issued days after Officer Kristina Ripatti was shot and paralyzed, Rice blamed this warrior culture on the myth and lore of urban policing. Notably, not one interview since has questioned whether Rice considers Ripattis experience to be lore, merely a myth or perhaps a case history from which officers should learn.
While The Times seeks critics to parse police actions, it ignores those critics ethical lapses. BOPC President John Mack publicly condemned the LAPD shooting of Devin Brown weeks before he was appointed to the Police Commission. But, in a glaring conflict of interest, he later voted on the BOPCs ruling about the incident. Yet The Times ignored this obvious conflict of interest and even quoted his statements on the case without caveat.
So, five valorous cops Zeeman, Gregson, and three who will be decorated today move to other agencies. Yet the political and media focus simply magnifies the factors that drive cops like these out of the Los Angeles Police Department. The results are not hard to gauge.
Weeks after Zeeman and Gregson were decorated, 14-year-old Cheryl Green was murdered a mere 20 blocks from the site of the Frank Garcia chase. In reaction, Mayor Villaraigosa launched a highly publicized gang crackdown with full media fanfare. Mayor Villaraigosa may have political savvy, but his city is missing something far more important: two courageous and experienced cops who know Cheryl Greens neighborhood better than the mayor ever will and who know gangs better than the newly-hired 60% of the department.
There is an ironic post-script to this story. Three blocks from the scene of the Garcia shooting, two other LAPD officers shot a gang member during a running gun battle in an apartment complex.
One must wonder if they will receive medals from the LAPD, or new badges from Newport Beach.
But, if you want to know, the last place to look is the L.A. Times.
[E-mail the author at rcjparry@gmail.com]
62 Comments »
Mayor said:
“The clash between LAPD officers and demonstrators at a May 1 immigration rally will likely result in multimillion-dollar legal judgments that will be a “waste” of taxpayer dollars, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said today.”
I would suspect that the mayor is secretly undermining his own city hoping that his BRO’s and people in the barrios stick it to his city.
He dosen’t care as it is no money out of his traitorous pocket.
“Watch for housing prices to plummet”
Already are.
“then LA will be run just like a town in Mexico. Run by thugs, gangs and narco-terrorists.”
It is already run by thugs. Look at the mayor.
“He dosent care as it is no money out of his traitorous pocket”
And a hero to 6 million illegals!
“He dosent care as it is no money out of his traitorous pocket”
And a hero to 6 million illegals!
They are saying that, however they are talking about the cops not the riotus demonstraters
Why doesn’t he pay for it himself?
Have you EVER heard of a Liberal politician aying for ANYTHING?
Hell, no. They will gouge the taxpayers.
An unverified rumor I hear is that lawyers who succesfully sue the City of LA kick back a portion of the award to the campaign funds of the mayor and councilmen.
The illegals should be grateful that the police officers used rubber bullets instead of metal bullets.
It makes me angry that some Rag Head Camel Jockey in Bumfock Egypt can see the problems the cowardly liberal Democrats and do nothing Republican politicians of this country do not seem to understand.
I can tell you I am really fed up with the shenanigans of many of my Republican party leaders and all those associated with the traitorous left wing fringe Democrats.
The Democrats and their enablers the Maim Stream Media may want us to get a butt kicking by the Middle East Religion of Piece Sand Pounders but that loss should it come may just be the undoing that holds this great country together.
I honestly believe that the only way we can win in Iraq is to take it forcefully to the enemy with no regard to Hoyles rules of finicky engagement as prescribed by the likes of Nancy and Hairy.
For Gods sake Washington get out of the way let our troops fight and then get the hell out.
I would start by removing every embedded reporter and placing them into the Green Zone post haste.
I do not want to read another story about how some asshole jihadists who wants to kill my American boys was not treated with kid gloves.
“Historically, it’s always been line officer who’s taken the brunt” of the blame, Villaraigosa said. “This is going to change”
What does this mean?
Are the illegal aliens actually going to be held responsible for their criminal activity that day?
BWAAAAAAAHAAAAAHAAAAAAAAHAAAAA
“The thought is crossing my mind that this country is really in trouble internally”
You are correct, my FRiend!
“I do not want to read another story about how some asshole jihadists who wants to kill my American boys was not treated with kid gloves”
We are being forced to fight a P C war, and this administration is also complicit by not protecting our troops from fake accusations and trials.
“
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