Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Commission to consider interim LAPD chief

Former head’s tenure marked by controvers­y

- By Maria L. La Ganga

There was just one item on the agenda when the Los Angeles Police Commission met in special session Friday, a critical decision that must be made in about six weeks: Who will step in on an interim basis when police Chief Michel Moore’s tumultuous tenure comes to an end?

Depending on whom you ask, an interim police chief is either a simple placeholde­r to keep things moving during the search for a permanent replacemen­t, or the person is a strategic partner who will help Mayor Karen Bass figure out what kind of chief the department needs to serve one of the biggest, most diverse cities in the country.

Connie Rice, who served on former President Barack Obama’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing, said an interim chief ’s job is to give the mayor “a state of the department CAT scan,” a deep assessment of “what are the priorities for hitting reset, identifyin­g areas where there’s been progress made, slippage, areas for repair.”

If a police department is “too topheavy” or is filled with people ready to retire, Rice said, a new permanent chief would need the skills to build an agency from the ground up. If crime has moved online, the new chief would need sophistica­ted cyber skills.

“My inkling right now,” Rice said in an interview, is that the department needs an interim chief “who is fluent in the LAPD. … You don’t want somebody who needs to know where the bathrooms are.”

On the other hand, Rice said, “you don’t want someone internal.”

Former police commission­er Steve Soboroff would add at least one more requiremen­t: “I think the goal would be to have the interim be as interim as possible” and not hope to vie for the top job. It should be a rule, he said, “that whoever becomes the interim chief will not be the chief of police.”

Friday’s nearly four-hour meeting was the first time the commission has met in closed session to discuss the interim chief ’s selection, said Richard Tefank, the board’s executive director, although “there’s been some staff work done on it.”

The goal, Tefank said, “is to have the interim in place before Chief Moore leaves, and then work on the permanent replacemen­t.”

Moore and Bass announced earlier this month that he would step down at the end of February, after five-and-a-half years on the job.

Moore was reappointe­d a year ago to serve a second five-year term and planned to serve for two or three years. Moore’s idea was that he would hand the job over to a new chief ahead of the 2028 Olympic Games.

But his tenure has been marked with controvers­y, and he announced his resignatio­n on Jan. 12.

“I know I’ve made mistakes and missteps,” Moore said at the time. “But I’m also confident that my work has seen success across a broad spectrum of topics unmatched by any other law enforcemen­t agency in this country.”

Moore said the department has become more diverse under his watch. Recent LAPD data show crime is on a downward trend.

At the same time, the department has faced several scandals which have tainted his time as top cop.

An assistant chief allegedly tracked an officer with whom he was romantical­ly involved, for example, and gang-unit officers have been suspected of thefts and illegal stops.

Brief public comment before the police commission went into closed session Friday ranged from civil but critical to profane and unprintabl­e.

Over about five minutes, four men took aim at Moore, the police commission, the process of picking an interim chief, and Black women in leadership positions.

One commenter asked God to bless the outgoing chief, another wished Moore “good riddance.”

 ?? Irfan Khan
Tribune News Service ?? LAPD Chief Michel Moore inspects a graduating class of recruits at a 2022 ceremony. Moore announced earlier this month that he would step down at the end of February.
Irfan Khan Tribune News Service LAPD Chief Michel Moore inspects a graduating class of recruits at a 2022 ceremony. Moore announced earlier this month that he would step down at the end of February.

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