ACLU/SC Says LAPD Has Not Addressed Root Causes Of Last Year's Melee (5/1/2008)
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LOS ANGELES – One year and numerous investigations later, the Los Angeles
Police Department (LAPD) has still not addressed the root causes of
last year's
melee in MacArthur Park in which hundreds of peaceful
demonstrators and
journalists were beaten and injured by LAPD officers,
according to the ACLU of
Southern California.
In a status report filed today in U.S. District Court,
ACLU/SC
attorneys charge that despite a clear department policy against
excessive use of force, the officers and supervisors of the
Metropolitan
Division, who were in charge of keeping the peace, had
"drifted towards not
merely a practice but a trained policy of
unconstitutional use of force for
peaceful demonstrators." What makes
this finding so troubling, the report
continues, is that it fits with
longstanding critiques of the LAPD as an
institution where such
behavior is condoned.
These conclusions by the ACLU/SC
are based in part on the LAPD's own
May Day report, released in October of 2007
which states: "…Some of the
officers and supervisors in MacArthur Park believed
baton strikes could
be used to compel a person to disperse, even if they were
merely
standing in front of the officers, failing to respond to direction." The
LAPD report further criticizes the absence of oversight, which "allowed
the
quality and content of Metropolitan Division's training to degrade
over time…
Further evidence revealed that some policies were taught
incorrectly…."
"What is
remarkable here is that after an entire year, they have
failed to examine how
training and practice in the department's elite
Metropolitan Division degraded,"
said Mark Rosenbaum, legal director of
the ACLU/SC. "That is a crucial question
for a department now subject
to a consent decree aimed at rooting out a culture
of unconstitutional
practices and excessive force."
In 2000, in response to
corruption scandals surrounding the
department's Rampart Division, the U.S.
Justice Department found that
officers routinely violated the constitutional
rights of Los Angeles
residents. The findings led to a consent decree that
installed a
special monitor to insure the department would make necessary
reforms.
The ACLU/SC, which is a party to the decree, is asking the court to
direct the independent monitor to investigate how the training in the
Metropolitan Division failed and recommend changes to insure this
doesn't happen
in the future.
"In the last year the LAPD has made a number of positive changes in its
approach to crowd control tactics and training," said Peter Bibring,
staff
attorney for the ACLU/SC, "but until the LAPD finds out how
officers came to
believe this kind of unconstitutional conduct was
appropriate, incidents of
excessive force by officers will
continue."
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