News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Rampart Probe Is Dividing Local Leaders |
Title: | US CA: Rampart Probe Is Dividing Local Leaders |
Published On: | 2000-02-13 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 03:52:54 |
RAMPART PROBE IS DIVIDING LOCAL LEADERS
The Los Angeles Police Department's ever-expanding Rampart Division
corruption crisis is driving a wedge through long-standing political
relationships as some local leaders brace for the scandal's fallout,
insulate themselves from damage and, in the view of some critics,
concentrate on containing the issue rather than pursuing it to the end.
According to a wide variety of sources - including officials in Mayor
Richard Riordan's administration, the LAPD, the Police Commission, the City
Council, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office and elsewhere -
these are a few of the emerging conflicts:
* Dist. Atty. Gil Garcetti and Police Chief Bernard C. Parks are sharply at
odds, blaming one another for delays. Each of the two men, although
publicly civil, has gone so far as to suggest in private that the other may
be foot-dragging intentionally, either for political purposes or out of
fear of what a full investigation may turn up.
* Two people say that behind closed doors, Riordan has voiced doubts about
Police Commission President Gerald L. Chaleff, whose panel oversees the
LAPD and will review its conclusions about the corruption investigation.
Riordan denies having disparaged Chaleff.
Ironically, some outside observers are unhappy with Chaleff and the
commission, but for opposite reasons: Where Riordan wants the commission to
stand firmly with Parks, some LAPD critics see the panel as being too
silent and supportive, which they believe is contributing to the generally
tepid public reaction to the continuing revelations of police misconduct.
* Some City Council members, although convinced that Parks wants to root
out the problem, appear ready to endorse an outside investigation as well
as new moves to impose tighter civilian control over the ever-troubled
LAPD. That course would put them at odds with Parks and Riordan.
"They, top management, continue to say, 'There is not a code of silence,
there is not a cultural problem,' " the council's Public Safety Committee
Chairwoman Cindy Miscikowski said. "All the evidence is to the contrary."
* Some police commissioners report that they have felt indirect pressure
from Riordan to support Parks' conclusion that the recent shooting of a
homeless woman, although the result of bad tactics, did not violate LAPD
policy.
Although Riordan administration officials have not addressed the shooting -
but rather the overall question of LAPD shooting review policy - some
commissioners say they believe Riordan aides want them to side with the
chief to avoid undermining him during the Rampart probe. Those
commissioners say that is increasingly difficult because their own
inspector general believes the commission should rule that the shooting was
improper.
Dispute Becomes Increasingly Public
Of all the relationships being tested, none is more important or more
strained than that between the area's two central law enforcement agencies,
the district attorney's office and the LAPD.
To some extent, that is predictable, even inevitable. Police tend to blame
prosecutors for losing their cases, while prosecutors often accuse police
of delivering them too little to win over a jury.
In this case, however, the stakes are higher than in most. And the
accusations are more serious.
In recent weeks, the agencies have each lobbed their grenades in private
battles that are increasingly beginning to explode on the public stage.
Aides and sources close to Garcetti and Parks report a building feud.
Garcetti, according to those sources, complains that the LAPD is moving too
slowly and that the cases it sends to his office for prosecution are weak
and undermined by the need to rely on former Officer Rafael Perez, who has
turned informant as part of a plea bargain. Some of the evidence is so
flimsy, Garcetti has reportedly said, that he and some of his deputies
wonder whether the LAPD and its chief genuinely want to expose the full
scandal.
Meanwhile, the LAPD dawdled on another highly touted initiative. Under
pressure created by the Rampart scandal, Garcetti recently reactivated the
county's so-called roll-out team, a group of prosecutors who go to the
scenes of police shootings. Quick to agree to the program were the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's Department and other local agencies. The LAPD, by
contrast, only came aboard Friday.
As of Friday morning, Garcetti was complaining about the standoff with the
LAPD.
"They have not signed the protocol," the district attorney said at that
time. "There's not going to be a negotiation about this. They will either
sign it or not sign it."
But by Friday evening, that situation had changed.
After a reporter asked about the roll-out team that day, Riordan got Parks
and Garcetti on a conference call. They struck an uneasy truce, with the
chief agreeing to the protocol for prosecution roll-outs. Hours later,
prosecutors rolled out in response to an LAPD shooting for the first time.
Two blocks from Garcetti's office, in the headquarters of the LAPD, other
sources say Parks accuses Garcetti's staff of being late getting to the
game and complains that the prosecutors are so afraid of losing a
high-profile case that they refuse to turn up the heat by hauling an
officer or two into court on criminal charges.
"Any finger-pointing at the Los Angeles Police Department is misdirected,"
Parks said in an interview last week. "It's pretty clear that we have in
the last two years put significant resources, investigators ... into this
investigation. We have pressured the D.A.'s office to file on the initial
people ... and we certainly, with our experience, know that there is more
than enough to move forward [with those prosecutions]."
As examples, Parks and other Police Department officials said they would
like to see three of the LAPD's own charged criminally: Officer Nino
Durden, Officer Michael Buchanan and former Officer Brian Hewitt.
Police officials seem particularly keen on prosecuting Buchanan, who they
believe lied under oath and might testify against other officers if he is
faced with the possibility of going to prison. Garcetti has balked,
however, worried that Buchanan would fight his case in court and might
prevail once a jury hears that much of the evidence against him is being
provided by Perez. As a witness, Perez has the dual disadvantages of being
an admittedly corrupt police officer and of having an incentive to
implicate other officers in order to reduce his own criminal sentence.
Parks Urges Prosecution
Nevertheless, Parks and other LAPD officials said they believe strong cases
can be made in which other evidence corroborates Perez's allegations.
Parks specifically cited Buchanan as an officer who should be prosecuted -
and blamed a timid district attorney's office for failing to do so.
"There's a clear crime of perjury," he said. "They can't come to grips with
that case." Garcetti brusquely disagreed.
"Are we more likely to get pressure with a single perjury count or more
counts?" he asked. "No one ... is going to beat me over the head to move
quicker than is professionally, ethically appropriate."
While he and Garcetti feud, Parks has managed to keep up a quiet but steady
drumbeat against Police Commission President Chaleff, whom sources say the
chief views as untrustworthy. (Parks would not comment publicly on Chaleff
for this article.) That campaign appears to be bearing some fruit, as
Riordan, once a Chaleff supporter, lately has been cool to him, according
to mayoral associates.
Riordan insists his faith in Chaleff remains strong. "I think he's doing a
good job," he said.
But compare that to Riordan's assessment of Parks. The chief, according to
Riordan, is "incredibly competent," and nothing less than the best chief on
Earth.
"I can't think of any human being who would do a better job," Riordan said
last week.
The impression that Riordan is losing faith in his Police Commission
president is so widespread that some observers believe Chaleff has become a
pawn in another conflict: The strained friendship between the mayor and his
longtime friend and advisor, Bill Wardlaw, who has defied Riordan by
supporting City Atty. James Hahn in the campaign for mayor. Chaleff is
Wardlaw's lawyer, and some city government insiders who believe Riordan's
faith in Chaleff is waning attribute it to the mayor's larger loss of trust
in Wardlaw.
What most observers note about Riordan is how little he's had to say about
the Rampart scandal.
"I think it's fair to say there's been a conspicuous silence from the mayor
on the question of Rampart," Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas said. "That's
clearly his prerogative ... [but] those who are elected have a
responsibility to communicate as clearly as possible what will be done, how
it will be done and the timetable in which it will be done."
The mayor's relative silence about Rampart has been even more curious given
that before it's over, the Rampart mess could prove one of the costliest
police corruption cases in American history and by far the most traumatic
city government breakdown of the Riordan years. Riordan's last budget
already is being affected, as many observers believe the extra revenue
provided by a vibrant local economy will nevertheless do little to help a
city that soon will be faced with hundreds of millions of dollars in
settlements and judgments as a result of the police scandal.
Riordan has been so determined to stay out of the Rampart fray that people
familiar with the case said the mayor was offered a briefing on the status
of the case by representatives of the district attorney's office but turned
it down rather than inject himself into the process.
In an interview Friday, Garcetti initially declined to comment on whether
Riordan had rejected an offered briefing. Then, minutes after the interview
concluded, Garcetti called back to say that Riordan's office had accepted
his offer of a briefing and that one would probably occur this week.
Mayor's Role in Police Issues
Riordan's reluctance to play an active role in the investigation has not
prevented the mayor's office from being actively engaged in other police
issues. On the shooting of homeless woman Margaret Mitchell, for instance,
sources say Riordan aides and advisors have worked to keep the commission
from drafting new standards on police shootings and then applying them to
the Mitchell case.
Some commissioners have interpreted that as lobbying to convince them not
to overrule the chief on that shooting, which Parks concluded resulted from
poor tactics but was not a violation of LAPD policy. The commission's
ruling on that shooting will be closely watched and is made more
problematic by the fact that its own inspector general has concluded that
the board should condemn the officers' actions, according to law
enforcement sources. Riordan said he is not intimately familiar with the
Mitchell case, but some of his closest associates have been lobbying on his
behalf, according to commissioners and others.
"The mayor has never lobbied his commissioners," Wardlaw said. When asked
whether he had made calls on Riordan's behalf, Wardlaw crisply replied: "No
comment. I don't talk about my private conversations."
Riordan's chief of staff, Kelly Martin, has also raised the issue with
commissioners. According to several sources, Martin has told commissioners
that she believes the panel needs to stick with its long-standing approach
to examining the propriety of shootings and not change the rules in the
middle of the Mitchell case. Under that traditional approach, investigators
consider the officers' tactics that led up to the shooting separately from
the shooting itself.
Discord Over Policy on Police Shootings
In short, what that means is the question of whether a shooting is "in
policy" is decided principally by whether the officers who fired their
weapons did so to prevent themselves or another person from imminent harm.
That method is intended to give officers some reasonable latitude to
protect themselves from harm, even in instances where their own mistakes
contributed to creating a dangerous situation.
That approach frustrates some police critics, who argue that officers
should be taken to task for tactical errors that result in shootings. They
contend that bad tactics ought to be sufficient for a determination that a
shooting was a violation of the LAPD's policy.
Sources say the Police Commission is interested in considering a new method
that would hold officers more strictly accountable for tactical decisions
that provoke a threatening confrontation. The same sources indicate that
Martin, in her conversations with commissioners, has asked them to set
aside that question and decide it separately from the particulars of the
Mitchell case.
Never, commissioners and others stress, has Martin suggested how the
commissioners ought to vote on the shooting.
Across the top ranks of Los Angeles' political leadership, the emerging
strains are themselves a source of concern. All sides agree that unity
would be helpful, but it appears increasingly difficult to achieve.
The Los Angeles Police Department's ever-expanding Rampart Division
corruption crisis is driving a wedge through long-standing political
relationships as some local leaders brace for the scandal's fallout,
insulate themselves from damage and, in the view of some critics,
concentrate on containing the issue rather than pursuing it to the end.
According to a wide variety of sources - including officials in Mayor
Richard Riordan's administration, the LAPD, the Police Commission, the City
Council, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office and elsewhere -
these are a few of the emerging conflicts:
* Dist. Atty. Gil Garcetti and Police Chief Bernard C. Parks are sharply at
odds, blaming one another for delays. Each of the two men, although
publicly civil, has gone so far as to suggest in private that the other may
be foot-dragging intentionally, either for political purposes or out of
fear of what a full investigation may turn up.
* Two people say that behind closed doors, Riordan has voiced doubts about
Police Commission President Gerald L. Chaleff, whose panel oversees the
LAPD and will review its conclusions about the corruption investigation.
Riordan denies having disparaged Chaleff.
Ironically, some outside observers are unhappy with Chaleff and the
commission, but for opposite reasons: Where Riordan wants the commission to
stand firmly with Parks, some LAPD critics see the panel as being too
silent and supportive, which they believe is contributing to the generally
tepid public reaction to the continuing revelations of police misconduct.
* Some City Council members, although convinced that Parks wants to root
out the problem, appear ready to endorse an outside investigation as well
as new moves to impose tighter civilian control over the ever-troubled
LAPD. That course would put them at odds with Parks and Riordan.
"They, top management, continue to say, 'There is not a code of silence,
there is not a cultural problem,' " the council's Public Safety Committee
Chairwoman Cindy Miscikowski said. "All the evidence is to the contrary."
* Some police commissioners report that they have felt indirect pressure
from Riordan to support Parks' conclusion that the recent shooting of a
homeless woman, although the result of bad tactics, did not violate LAPD
policy.
Although Riordan administration officials have not addressed the shooting -
but rather the overall question of LAPD shooting review policy - some
commissioners say they believe Riordan aides want them to side with the
chief to avoid undermining him during the Rampart probe. Those
commissioners say that is increasingly difficult because their own
inspector general believes the commission should rule that the shooting was
improper.
Dispute Becomes Increasingly Public
Of all the relationships being tested, none is more important or more
strained than that between the area's two central law enforcement agencies,
the district attorney's office and the LAPD.
To some extent, that is predictable, even inevitable. Police tend to blame
prosecutors for losing their cases, while prosecutors often accuse police
of delivering them too little to win over a jury.
In this case, however, the stakes are higher than in most. And the
accusations are more serious.
In recent weeks, the agencies have each lobbed their grenades in private
battles that are increasingly beginning to explode on the public stage.
Aides and sources close to Garcetti and Parks report a building feud.
Garcetti, according to those sources, complains that the LAPD is moving too
slowly and that the cases it sends to his office for prosecution are weak
and undermined by the need to rely on former Officer Rafael Perez, who has
turned informant as part of a plea bargain. Some of the evidence is so
flimsy, Garcetti has reportedly said, that he and some of his deputies
wonder whether the LAPD and its chief genuinely want to expose the full
scandal.
Meanwhile, the LAPD dawdled on another highly touted initiative. Under
pressure created by the Rampart scandal, Garcetti recently reactivated the
county's so-called roll-out team, a group of prosecutors who go to the
scenes of police shootings. Quick to agree to the program were the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's Department and other local agencies. The LAPD, by
contrast, only came aboard Friday.
As of Friday morning, Garcetti was complaining about the standoff with the
LAPD.
"They have not signed the protocol," the district attorney said at that
time. "There's not going to be a negotiation about this. They will either
sign it or not sign it."
But by Friday evening, that situation had changed.
After a reporter asked about the roll-out team that day, Riordan got Parks
and Garcetti on a conference call. They struck an uneasy truce, with the
chief agreeing to the protocol for prosecution roll-outs. Hours later,
prosecutors rolled out in response to an LAPD shooting for the first time.
Two blocks from Garcetti's office, in the headquarters of the LAPD, other
sources say Parks accuses Garcetti's staff of being late getting to the
game and complains that the prosecutors are so afraid of losing a
high-profile case that they refuse to turn up the heat by hauling an
officer or two into court on criminal charges.
"Any finger-pointing at the Los Angeles Police Department is misdirected,"
Parks said in an interview last week. "It's pretty clear that we have in
the last two years put significant resources, investigators ... into this
investigation. We have pressured the D.A.'s office to file on the initial
people ... and we certainly, with our experience, know that there is more
than enough to move forward [with those prosecutions]."
As examples, Parks and other Police Department officials said they would
like to see three of the LAPD's own charged criminally: Officer Nino
Durden, Officer Michael Buchanan and former Officer Brian Hewitt.
Police officials seem particularly keen on prosecuting Buchanan, who they
believe lied under oath and might testify against other officers if he is
faced with the possibility of going to prison. Garcetti has balked,
however, worried that Buchanan would fight his case in court and might
prevail once a jury hears that much of the evidence against him is being
provided by Perez. As a witness, Perez has the dual disadvantages of being
an admittedly corrupt police officer and of having an incentive to
implicate other officers in order to reduce his own criminal sentence.
Parks Urges Prosecution
Nevertheless, Parks and other LAPD officials said they believe strong cases
can be made in which other evidence corroborates Perez's allegations.
Parks specifically cited Buchanan as an officer who should be prosecuted -
and blamed a timid district attorney's office for failing to do so.
"There's a clear crime of perjury," he said. "They can't come to grips with
that case." Garcetti brusquely disagreed.
"Are we more likely to get pressure with a single perjury count or more
counts?" he asked. "No one ... is going to beat me over the head to move
quicker than is professionally, ethically appropriate."
While he and Garcetti feud, Parks has managed to keep up a quiet but steady
drumbeat against Police Commission President Chaleff, whom sources say the
chief views as untrustworthy. (Parks would not comment publicly on Chaleff
for this article.) That campaign appears to be bearing some fruit, as
Riordan, once a Chaleff supporter, lately has been cool to him, according
to mayoral associates.
Riordan insists his faith in Chaleff remains strong. "I think he's doing a
good job," he said.
But compare that to Riordan's assessment of Parks. The chief, according to
Riordan, is "incredibly competent," and nothing less than the best chief on
Earth.
"I can't think of any human being who would do a better job," Riordan said
last week.
The impression that Riordan is losing faith in his Police Commission
president is so widespread that some observers believe Chaleff has become a
pawn in another conflict: The strained friendship between the mayor and his
longtime friend and advisor, Bill Wardlaw, who has defied Riordan by
supporting City Atty. James Hahn in the campaign for mayor. Chaleff is
Wardlaw's lawyer, and some city government insiders who believe Riordan's
faith in Chaleff is waning attribute it to the mayor's larger loss of trust
in Wardlaw.
What most observers note about Riordan is how little he's had to say about
the Rampart scandal.
"I think it's fair to say there's been a conspicuous silence from the mayor
on the question of Rampart," Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas said. "That's
clearly his prerogative ... [but] those who are elected have a
responsibility to communicate as clearly as possible what will be done, how
it will be done and the timetable in which it will be done."
The mayor's relative silence about Rampart has been even more curious given
that before it's over, the Rampart mess could prove one of the costliest
police corruption cases in American history and by far the most traumatic
city government breakdown of the Riordan years. Riordan's last budget
already is being affected, as many observers believe the extra revenue
provided by a vibrant local economy will nevertheless do little to help a
city that soon will be faced with hundreds of millions of dollars in
settlements and judgments as a result of the police scandal.
Riordan has been so determined to stay out of the Rampart fray that people
familiar with the case said the mayor was offered a briefing on the status
of the case by representatives of the district attorney's office but turned
it down rather than inject himself into the process.
In an interview Friday, Garcetti initially declined to comment on whether
Riordan had rejected an offered briefing. Then, minutes after the interview
concluded, Garcetti called back to say that Riordan's office had accepted
his offer of a briefing and that one would probably occur this week.
Mayor's Role in Police Issues
Riordan's reluctance to play an active role in the investigation has not
prevented the mayor's office from being actively engaged in other police
issues. On the shooting of homeless woman Margaret Mitchell, for instance,
sources say Riordan aides and advisors have worked to keep the commission
from drafting new standards on police shootings and then applying them to
the Mitchell case.
Some commissioners have interpreted that as lobbying to convince them not
to overrule the chief on that shooting, which Parks concluded resulted from
poor tactics but was not a violation of LAPD policy. The commission's
ruling on that shooting will be closely watched and is made more
problematic by the fact that its own inspector general has concluded that
the board should condemn the officers' actions, according to law
enforcement sources. Riordan said he is not intimately familiar with the
Mitchell case, but some of his closest associates have been lobbying on his
behalf, according to commissioners and others.
"The mayor has never lobbied his commissioners," Wardlaw said. When asked
whether he had made calls on Riordan's behalf, Wardlaw crisply replied: "No
comment. I don't talk about my private conversations."
Riordan's chief of staff, Kelly Martin, has also raised the issue with
commissioners. According to several sources, Martin has told commissioners
that she believes the panel needs to stick with its long-standing approach
to examining the propriety of shootings and not change the rules in the
middle of the Mitchell case. Under that traditional approach, investigators
consider the officers' tactics that led up to the shooting separately from
the shooting itself.
Discord Over Policy on Police Shootings
In short, what that means is the question of whether a shooting is "in
policy" is decided principally by whether the officers who fired their
weapons did so to prevent themselves or another person from imminent harm.
That method is intended to give officers some reasonable latitude to
protect themselves from harm, even in instances where their own mistakes
contributed to creating a dangerous situation.
That approach frustrates some police critics, who argue that officers
should be taken to task for tactical errors that result in shootings. They
contend that bad tactics ought to be sufficient for a determination that a
shooting was a violation of the LAPD's policy.
Sources say the Police Commission is interested in considering a new method
that would hold officers more strictly accountable for tactical decisions
that provoke a threatening confrontation. The same sources indicate that
Martin, in her conversations with commissioners, has asked them to set
aside that question and decide it separately from the particulars of the
Mitchell case.
Never, commissioners and others stress, has Martin suggested how the
commissioners ought to vote on the shooting.
Across the top ranks of Los Angeles' political leadership, the emerging
strains are themselves a source of concern. All sides agree that unity
would be helpful, but it appears increasingly difficult to achieve.
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