Pubdate: Wed, 01 Mar 2000
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Jim Newton, Matt Lait, Scott Glover, Times Staff Writers

LAPD CONDEMNED BY ITS OWN INQUIRY INTO RAMPART SCANDAL

Police: Breakdowns that allowed corruption are still uncorrected, study
finds. The chief concedes that mediocrity became a way of life at all
levels of the department.

The Los Angeles Police Department failed time and again to take steps
that might have headed off the worst corruption scandal in its
history, according to a sweeping self-indictment prepared by the
department's own leaders.

In a letter accompanying the long-awaited Board of Inquiry report into
the corruption centered in the department's Rampart Division, which
will be released today, Police Chief Bernard C. Parks called the
scandal a "life-altering experience for the Los Angeles Police
Department" in which corrupt officers took advantage of lax
supervision to carry out criminal acts.

"We as an organization provided the opportunity," Parks
wrote.

The 362-page report was given to Mayor Richard Riordan and members of
the Police Commission on Tuesday evening and will be released to the
public and the rest of the city's elected leaders today.

It was provided to The Times on Tuesday by top officials of the
LAPD.

According to the report, many of the breakdowns that allowed the
Rampart police scandal to fester and spread--including failures to
check the backgrounds of police recruits, to monitor officer
misconduct and to supervise officers in the field--remain uncorrected
despite mounting public and political criticism of the LAPD and the
city leadership.

Those disclosures effectively put the city's entire political
leadership on the spot. Most directly, they demonstrate that the LAPD
ignored some calls for reform and created an atmosphere ripe for
corruption. At the same time, they also suggest that Riordan and City
Council members backed policies that eroded the Police Department's
ability to control wayward officers.

The results, by the LAPD's own admission, have been costly--and
tragic.

"This scandal has devastated our relationship with the public we serve
and threatened the integrity of our entire criminal justice system,"
the Board of Inquiry report concludes. "Distrust, cynicism, fear of
the police, and an erosion of community law and order are the
inevitable result of a law enforcement agency whose ethics and
integrity have become suspect."

While the report admits breakdowns at every level of the
department--and in the process sketching a broader, more damning
picture even than the 1991 Christopher Commission did in the wake of
the Rodney G. King beating--its 108 recommendations essentially focus
on internal remedies.

A number highlight ways to strengthen the police chief's power to
investigate, discipline and even force the retirement of officers.

They pointedly do not endorse creation of outside systems for
subjecting the LAPD to additional scrutiny.

Unlike the Christopher Commission, which subtly but unmistakably
called on Chief Daryl F. Gates to retire, the Board of Inquiry is
generally, and not surprisingly, complimentary of moves by Parks, who
supervises the members of the board and has repeatedly pledged to root
out corruption in the department.

Parks' own role in the events at issue is somewhat blurred: Although
he was named chief after the incidents at the center of the Rampart
probe occurred, he served as the LAPD's second-ranking official from
1992 to 1994. He was demoted that year and put in charge of special
investigations, including internal affairs, but from that point on, he
was kept at arm's length from many department decisions by then-Chief
Willie L. Williams.

Parks Takes Share of Blame

In an interview Tuesday, Parks said he shared in the departmentwide
blame for Rampart.

"I don't think anybody who's been at this department for any length of
time can say: 'I've done a good job with this,' " he said. "And that's
including me."

The LAPD's scathing self-appraisal could bolster both sides of the
argument over whether outside review of the department is needed: On
one hand, the report says the problems it documents are widespread and
serious; on the other hand, the city's police leadership is
demonstrating unprecedented candor in publicly admitting those flaws.

In fact, the LAPD's analysis of itself cites area after area in which
police officers and their supervisors failed the department and the
public.

A few examples from the report:

* "A breakdown in front-line supervision was certainly apparent in
Rampart."

* "Time and again, the board found clear patterns of misconduct that
went undetected. . . . Regardless of the source, complainants all
seemed to be viewed as recalcitrant, and their allegations were not
taken seriously."

* "People are making personnel and promotional decisions unaware of
matters that certainly would affect their decisions."

* "Our personnel evaluations have little or no credibility at any
level in the organization."

* "The command team at Rampart during most of this five-year period
lacked cohesive direction."

* "As painful as it may be, we must recognize that this problem
[failure to perform adequate background investigations on new hires]
has not been solved, but it must be if we are to provide the people of
this city with the quality of law enforcement it deserves."

Some of those issues, as well as others identified in the report, are
hardly new.

Police critics have been complaining for more than a decade that the
LAPD ignores civilian complaints about officer misconduct. Under
Parks, the department recently revamped its procedures for evaluating
citizen complaints, but the report makes it clear that the
department's unwillingness to take officer misconduct seriously
continued well into the 1990s, long after the Christopher Commission,
the American Civil Liberties Union and others had pointed to the problem.

In 1998, the LAPD's leadership announced that it had fulfilled nearly
all the recommendations of the Christopher Commission. The new report
provides striking evidence to the contrary, making it clear that a
number of key recommendations remain unresolved.

Among those is the long-standing question of whether the LAPD does
enough to identify and track so-called problem officers.

For years after the Christopher report, the department resisted
attempts to equip it with a computerized system for recording
complaints against police officers and other performance measures.

Finally, under pressure from the civilian Police Commission and the
U.S. Department of Justice, the LAPD adopted a system known as
TEAMS--an acronym for Training, Evaluation and Management System.

In the new report, however, department leaders concede that the system
has fallen far short of expectations. One key problem, according to
the report, is that essential data are being left out of the TEAMS
profiles of officers. "Several major personnel investigations were
found that did not appear on the officers' TEAMS history even though
the matter had been adjudicated for some time," the report states.

The result is that a supervisor, in deciding whether a particular
officer was suitable for a sensitive assignment, would not necessarily
have the benefit of knowing that officer's full work and complaint
history.

That disclosure is sure to create political fallout.

It raises questions, for instance, of why the Riordan administration
has allowed such a key Christopher Commission reform to languish
despite its public pledges to implement those changes and after years
of publicly clamoring for the implementation of the tracking system.

It also could annoy federal officials, who have monitored the officer
tracking system and insisted that the LAPD adopt strong controls.

Another section of the LAPD report that revives long-standing concerns
is its analysis of the role that police buildups have played in
allowing tainted recruits to find places in the department.

Specifically, the report mentions--without naming--four officers who
were hired despite criminal records that should have precluded them
from being employed.

Three of those recruits were hired before the 1991 Christopher report,
which documented some of the breakdowns in background checks.

But the fourth, according to the report, was hired in 1994 despite the
fact that he sold drugs as a juvenile and was involved in a "vehicle
tampering incident" as an adult.

That officer was hired after the reforms allegedly had been
implemented and after Riordan had become mayor, elected largely on his
pledge to add 3,000 police officers to the ranks in four years.

As such, the hiring of that officer makes it clear that the reforms
intended to solve the screening issues identified in 1991 were not
foolproof in 1994. And the report indicates that the problems continue
to this day, partly because of conflicts between the police and
personnel departments over officer hiring.

"This problem," it states flatly, "has not been solved."

Opposition From Union Expected

Other recommendations and observations contained in the report will
antagonize different interests.

Police union leaders, for instance, are likely to oppose
recommendations for expanded use of polygraphs, broadened powers to
investigate officers' financial records, and expanded authority to
force the retirements of certain officers.

The Board of Inquiry also recommended extending the one-year statute
of limitations on imposing serious discipline on officers found guilty
of misconduct. Officers and their union have long fought to protect
that limit and will undoubtedly continue to do so in the face of the
study.

In each case, the board recommendations suggest that Parks, who is
passionately disliked by the union, needs more authority over the
officers beneath him. That too is destined to rile the union leadership.

Another recommendation, calling for mandatory rotations in certain
sensitive units, will also be controversial within the LAPD, where
assignment to some operations is coveted and relinquished only
reluctantly.

Meanwhile, some state and local officials may question the changes in
state and local law needed to give Parks and his top staff those
powers--proposals that in some cases also will cost money but that the
report argues will pay for themselves in reduced city liability and
disciplinary expenses.

Despite the scores of recommendations and criticisms, the LAPD report
for the most part endorses the department's current policies and
procedures. The fact that corruption took such deep root in
Rampart--and perhaps elsewhere--is an indictment of the officers who
failed to carry out those procedures, not of the procedures
themselves, according to the Board of Inquiry.

Although that gives the report a sometimes odd tone, defending a
system that it admits failed badly, it also provides for some of the
document's most evident soul-searching.

One passage in particular warns of the consequences when police let
down their guard.

"Essentially, many of the problems found by this [Board of Inquiry]
boil down to people failing to do their jobs with a high level of
consistency and integrity," the report states. "Unfortunately, we
found this to be true at all levels of the organization, including top
managers, first-line supervisors and line personnel.

Clearly, pride in one's work and a commitment to do things correctly
the first time seems to have waned."

In the interview with Parks, the chief sounded the same
theme.

"Clearly," he said, "we have to stop accepting mediocre
work."

"Time and again, the board found clear patterns of misconduct that
went undetected. Nowhere was this more apparent than in the
investigation of personnel complaints made by the Rampart community.

Regardless of the source, complainants all seemed to be viewed as
recalcitrant and their allegations were not taken seriously by some of
the supervisors assigned to conduct the investigations." --Los Angeles
Police Department's Board of Inquiry report
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MAP posted-by: Greg