Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

LAPD rejecting most complaints

More than 600 allegation­s came in stemming from last summer’s protests.

- By Kevin Rector

Internal affairs investigat­ors reviewing hundreds of allegation­s of misconduct and excessive force by other Los Angeles police officers during last summer’s mass protests against police brutality are ruling on the side of the officers in most cases.

An internal report, submitted by LAPD Chief Michel Moore to the civilian Police Commission on Friday, noted that the department had received more than 600 allegation­s against officers. Some of those were duplicate complaints about the same incident, and from those the department launched 210 investigat­ions into 223 officers — 73 of which were related to the alleged use of nondeadly force, and five of which involved the alleged use of deadly force.

Other allegation­s included inhumane treatment during arrests and unbecoming behavior and biased policing.

Of the 73 allegation­s of less serious force, 33 have been resolved by the department — with zero resulting in a finding that the officers

were in the wrong, Moore’s report said. The remaining 40 cases are still under investigat­ion.

“Based on the investigat­ions to this point, no allegation­s for unauthoriz­ed force have been sustained,” Moore wrote. He added that many of the cases did not have enough “supporting informatio­n” to determine the officer involved or where the incident allegedly occurred.

The five alleged uses of deadly force still must go before the Police Commission, though the department’s own use-of-force panel has already reached findings in some of the cases.

In one incident in which an officer shot a projectile through a car window at a driver who had allegedly driven toward officers, and another officer fired a real bullet into the car, the review panel disapprove­d of the tactics and the lethal shot. The commission will review their findings.

The panel also ruled that an incident highlighte­d by The Times in which an officer shot a protester in the testicles with a projectile was within policy. That assessment will also go before the commission.

Several other cases involving officers shooting protesters with projectile­s remain under investigat­ion or review.

Moore wrote that, as of March 23, 37 of the 210 overall cases, involving a total of 155 allegation­s against officers, had been fully adjudicate­d. Out of those 155 allegation­s, just seven have been sustained.

Five of those had to do with the misuse of body cameras, one with neglect of duty and one for unbecoming conduct, Moore said.

An additional 67 allegation­s were determined to be unfounded, 41 ruled to have insufficie­nt evidence to support them, 17 found to involve behavior by officers that did not merit discipline, and 10 closed after the officers were exonerated.

Other cases remain under review.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? POLICE CHIEF Michel Moore talks to protesters at a George Floyd protest in the Fairfax district in May.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times POLICE CHIEF Michel Moore talks to protesters at a George Floyd protest in the Fairfax district in May.

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