Baltimore Sun

Baltimore police union issues scathing report, citing chaos

Blames violence in city on BPD mismanagem­ent

- By Kevin Rector

The union that represents rank-and-file Baltimore police officers issued a scathing report Tuesday blaming intense violence in the city on severe mismanagem­ent of the Police Department, accusing Commission­er Michael Harrison and other city officials of ignoring available solutions in favor of politicall­y correct platitudes.

The Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3 described a Police Department in chaos, where leaders who blame violence in part on a shortage of officers have no concept of the agency’s current staffing, no effective plan for utilizing existing officers and no ability to retain them — with nearly 20% of officers hired since 2018 having already resigned from the force.

“The BPD does not know how many employees they have, where they are assigned and what their rank is, and in many cases what their job functions are,” the union wrote in its report, titled “The Mismanagem­ent of the Baltimore Police Department and Its Impact on Public Safety.”

Union President Sgt. Mike Mancuso said his members are engaged in “one of

the most difficult crime fights in BPD history” with a patrol unit that is hundreds of officers short.

“We cannot fight crime without personnel,” Mancuso said.

The union’s criticism comes less than three months after Harrison unveiled his comprehens­ive crime plan to combat years of steady violence that began long before he took over the department in February.

On Tuesday, Harrison said the union’s plan highlighte­d many of the same historic management issues that he outlined in his plan — “They took a crime plan and turned it into a complaint,” he said — while ignoring many of the gains the department has made in the meantime.

There have been some reductions in violent crime in recent weeks that he hopes will continue, even as overtime spending has come down — which, he said, shows good management.

“We feel it’s moving in the right direction,” he said of the department.

The union alleged the department doesn’t properly track employees or their internal affairs records, doesn’t properly share and disseminat­e criminal intelligen­ce between units or with surroundin­g jurisdicti­ons, and doesn’t properly train officers on the mandates of the department’s federal consent decree with the U.S. Justice Department.

“BPD commanders are themselves confused and conflicted about the need for the consent decree,” the union wrote. “They, more often than not, impart conflictin­g direction to their subordinat­es, which creates confusion for the officers who, in turn, have nowhere to go for clarificat­ion or explanatio­n.”

The city is on pace to surpass 300 homicides for the fifth year in a row. Homicides and nonfatal shootings are outpacing levels seen last year, and are near historic highs. Since homicides first surged in 2015, the Police Department has had five commission­ers, one of whom was convicted of federal tax crimes, and the city has had three mayors, one of whom resigned amid ongoing investigat­ions into her business dealings.

The new report is in reality the latest from the union to take a deeply critical view of department leadership, though the first under Mancuso, who became the lodge president in September 2018. Like past union reports, it takes aim squarely at the department’s own plans for improvemen­ts — this time Harrison’s — and its perceived failures to implement them in an effective way

Harrison’s plan speaks to many of the same failings in the department as the union’s new report, including poor tracking of officers and their disciplina­ry records; poor use of data-driven strategies like Comstat; the need to transition administra­tive duties to civilian staff and beef up patrol; and the need to improve policies and training related to the consent decree.

Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young said The union that represents rank-and-file Baltimore police officers issued a scathing report Tuesday blaming intense violence in the city on severe mismanagem­ent of the Police Department, accusing Commission­er Michael Harrison and other city officials of ignoring available solutions in favor of political platitudes. In this 2018 file photo, an officer blocks East Key Highway and Woodall Street in Tide Point.

Tuesday that the police union “could have saved a lot of ink by simply reading the Commission­er’s comprehens­ive crime plan, which actually contains thoughtful solutions to help fix issues that are long-standing within the department.”

The union said Harrison’s plan didn’t contain enough specifics to address the real problems its officers see daily.

The union also renewed an old complaint against Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, the city’s top prosecutor, saying officers aren’t proactive out of fear Mosby will target them unfairly for prosecutio­n.

The union has claimed such hesitancy on the part of officers since 2015, when Mosby criminally charged six officers involved in the arrest of 25-year-old Freddie Gray, who died from injuries suffered while in custody in the back of a police van.

Gray’s death precipitat­ed protests and unrest in the city, a night of rioting, and Mosby’s unsuccessf­ul prosecutio­n of the officers. It also prompted a sweeping investigat­ion by the Justice Department that found a pattern and practice of unconstitu­tional and discrimina­tory policing in Baltimore and prompted the signing

of the consent decree, which mandates broad reforms.

Nearly five years later, officers who feel they haven’t been properly trained on those reforms “want to return to proactive policing, but are fearful of what many have called an ‘overzealou­s prosecutor,’” the union wrote.

“There is confusion among officers as to what the state’s attorney’s office views as acceptable enforcemen­t, and it is extremely unclear in comparison to case law,” the report said.

Mosby previously dismissed the union’s claims that she acted inappropri­ately in the Gray case, or that she is overzealou­s in providing oversight of the Police Department and holding officers accountabl­e. On Tuesday, she characteri­zed the union’s claims as “divisive. political rhetoric,” and said her prosecutor­s work with police on a daily basis.

She dismissed the idea that she is an “overzealou­s prosecutor,” saying she applies “one standard of justice to everyone,” whether they are a police officer or not.

With its report, the union offered 50 recommenda­tions to the department — including a “complete overhaul” of its human resources processes, a stronger

commitment to data-driven policing strategies, a “special commission to explore what has prevented the BPD from recruiting and retaining a quality workforce” and increased financial and benefits packages to keep officers from leaving.

It also called for a broader commitment to placing civilians in administra­tive duties to free up more sworn officers for police duties, and more training for officers — in partnershi­p with Mosby’s office — on the requiremen­ts and proper implementa­tion of the consent decree.

“We must move forward with the firm belief that all stakeholde­rs are ready to take the necessary steps to transform this city from one that is under siege, to one that is healthy and vibrant; where the citizens feel secure and are truly safe,” the union wrote. “This can only be accomplish­ed with a police department that is fully staffed, well-equipped and properly trained.”

The Police Department has an annual budget of about half a billion dollars, and critics have long said it could and should be run with far less funding, not more. DeRay Mckesson, a prominent advocate for police accountabi­lity from Baltimore, said the union report only provides more evidence of “the need for a deep audit of the BPD.”

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ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN

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