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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Police Scandal Is Worst Since 1930s
Title:US CA: Police Scandal Is Worst Since 1930s
Published On:1999-09-17
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 20:02:51
POLICE SCANDAL IS WORST SINCE 1930S

Crime: L.A. officers were notoriously corrupt in the early 20th century.

But reformers ultimately cleaned up City Hall despite bombings of their
leaders.

The Los Angeles Police Department's expanding corruption scandal is the
worst to strike the force since the 1930s--an era when mayors were crooks
and L.A. cops were bagmen and bombers.

For most of the early 20th century, Los Angeles was nationally notorious
for its dishonest politicians and police officers. But in 1933, when Frank
Shaw, a former grocery clerk turned city councilman and county supervisor,
was elected mayor, he quickly took the town's long tradition of public
corruption to a new, higher level referred to as the "Shaw spoils system."

Los Angeles mayors, district attorneys and councilmen took campaign money
and outright payoffs from madams, bootleggers and gamblers. The LAPD
Central Vice Squad was on the take virtually to a man.

City contracts were awarded without competitive bidding, people in city
government were paid to use designated contractors, large industries were
solicited for $5,000 down payments and $500-a-month bribes to keep their
enterprises open. And the Police Department was reorganized to suit Shaw
with the return of his ally, former Police Chief James E. Davis.

Meanwhile, Shaw's brother and aide, Joe, was selling LAPD jobs, the answer
keys to the department's promotional exams and hard-to-get Depression-era
promotions, right out of his City Hall office.

At the same time, the Central Vice Squad roamed the city, serving as the
ultimate enforcer and collector for organized vice operations and their
politician patrons.

Bordello queens and their badge-bearing partners could count on the
officers they paid off to give enough pre-raid warning to clear out any
big-name customers. Renowned procurer Lee Francis always had chilled French
champagne and Russian caviar waiting for the vice officers when they
arrived. And the little black book of Ann Forrester, dubbed the "Black
Widow," was filled with names not only of the city's business elite, but
also of LAPD's command staff.

How long Shaw and his buddies in blue might have continued their party is
anybody's guess. But their nemesis arose in the person of the courageous,
square-jawed Clifford Clinton, a little-known restaurateur, and a former
LAPD detective turned private-eye, Harry Raymond.

Clinton, owner of cafeterias that bore his first and last names, organized
CIVIC (Citizens Independent Vice Investigating Committee) that affiliated
500 business, church and public organizations. He and two others filed a
grand jury report in 1937 that charged Shaw and other members of his
administration with corruption.

For this, Clinton was vilified by Shaw, Davis, Dist. Atty. Burton Fitts and
the grand jury foreman, who called him "Public Enemy No. 1." Clinton's
taxes were raised almost $7,000 a year, his family was threatened and his
cafeterias were stink-bombed.

Growing ever more uneasy over Clinton's efforts, the LAPD's "red squad,"
long the downtown establishment's weapon against union organizers, bombed
the reformer's Los Feliz home on Oct. 18, 1937. A few months later, Lt.
Lynne Kynette of the red squad blew up Raymond's car, riddling his body
with wounds. The detective, however, lived to testify against City Hall,
causing something of an explosion himself.

The bombings by the mayor's police allies so outraged the public that they
voted Shaw out of office in one of the first recalls of a big-city mayor in
U.S. history. Kynette was sentenced to two years to life in San Quentin for
attempted murder. Davis and 23 other high-ranking LAPD officers were forced
to resign.

Gamblers and racketeers, once mainstays of the downtown economy, left Los
Angeles for the drier but greener pastures of Las Vegas.
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