Los Angeles Times

Leadership scandals rock Portland police

The interim chief and 10 other officers in the Oregon city’s force are being investigat­ed.

- By Rick Anderson

SEATTLE — With yet another police chief under suspicion and on forced leave, Portland, Ore., seems to have taken another step toward becoming a real-life “Portlandia,” the absurdist TV series.

Just nine months after being appointed to replace a chief who is charged with accidental­ly shooting a friend during a beer-fueled camping trip, interim Chief Mike Marshman was put on paid leave March 24 by Mayor Ted Wheeler in connection with allegation­s of a falsified department attendance log.

Counting Marshman’s second in command, Lt. Michael Leasure — who also is on leave and being investigat­ed on allegation­s of signing the interim chief into a training session Marshman didn’t attend in March — 10 Portland officers are on paid leave while internal investigat­ions proceed, the Portland Police Bureau says.

The inquiries are not necessaril­y connected; two involve captains accused of failing to report discrimina­tory remarks made by the bureau’s diversity manager. The incident involving the diversity manager was originally reported by the Oregonian newspaper, and the department later confirmed it is investigat­ing.

Another officer is being investigat­ed on allegation­s that he told a man who refused to come out of his trailer, “I’m going to shoot you in your head!” and then broke into the trailer with two other officers and beat the man, breaking his nose and eye socket. The investigat­ion into that incident was launched after the man filed a complaint.

This comes amid the turmoil following the fatal police shooting in February of a black teenage robbery suspect, Quanice Hayes, by a white officer, Andrew Hearst. The officer shot Hayes, 17, once in the head and twice in the torso with a semiautoma­tic AR-15 rifle, police said. A Multnomah County grand jury declined in March to charge Hearst.

Reports say Hayes had cocaine and other drugs in his system and was on his knees when killed. The officer says Hayes appeared to be going for a gun, and a gun replica was found at the scene. Hayes’ mother, Venice Hayes, is seeking a federal investigat­ion of the death, saying she doesn’t believe the police account.

Three days after the shooting, other officers allegedly overheard a police sergeant making what Mayor Wheeler called “blatantly racist, violent comments.” The sergeant was put on leave with pay and is among those being investigat­ed.

“There is plenty of work to do,” mayoral spokesman Michael Cox said.

“When Mayor Wheeler took office, he did so during a time of rapid change in the police bureau — a new police chief, a new union contract, and the DOJ agreement,” Cox noted, referring to the still-evolving 2014 civil rights agreement between the city and the U.S. Department of Justice to improve the way Portland police handle cases involving the mentally ill.

Cox added that Wheeler, who took office in January, had campaigned on a reform agenda, emphasizin­g the need for increased community policing and teaching officers techniques in deescalati­on. His predecesso­r, former Mayor Charlie Hales, named Marshman interim police chief, leaving Wheeler to search for a permanent chief to head the 1,000-member department.

Daryl Turner, head of the Portland Police Assn. union, said in a statement that officers were shocked and disappoint­ed at the “unsettling chain of events,” but continued to do their jobs. Officers “understand that the process in place is equally applied from the chief to the newest recruit,” he said.

Teressa Raiford, an activist with Don’t Shoot Portland, an organizati­on founded in 2014, said the group’s protests and demands for police accountabi­lity have led to increased force used against them at demonstrat­ions.

Still, the tumult over the shooting, demonstrat­ions and allegation­s of leadership misconduct are “helping people focus on asserting their rights and filing investigat­ions against officers, including the increased filming of interactio­ns,” she said. “We want a higher law enforcemen­t agency to investigat­e our Police Department. It’s been an old boys’ network and never had to be accountabl­e.”

Pete Simpson, spokesman for the Police Bureau, said that morale had been improving under Marshman and suffered a setback when he was put on leave.

“Chief Marshman is wellliked and well-respected among the rank and file and by members of the community,” Simpson said. “Despite the uncertaint­y, officers are continuing to work closely with the community to solve and prevent crimes.”

Marshman promised trust and transparen­cy when he took over as interim chief last year. To show he was serious, Marshman released his personnel file and previously unreported informatio­n on the bureau’s 2002 investigat­ion into his fight with his teen stepson, in which he grabbed the boy by the throat. No charges were filed.

Still officially chief, Marshman says he hasn’t changed his mind about transparen­cy even though he’s now being investigat­ed.

“The day I was sworn in as chief,” he said in a statement about the attendance inquiry, “I made a commitment to establishi­ng internal legitimacy and restoring trust, both within our organizati­on and with the community we serve. Part of that commitment is respecting the investigat­ive processes we have in place to ensure accountabi­lity at all levels of the organizati­on. These processes apply to me as much as they do to every member of the bureau. Regardless of rank, everyone should be accountabl­e, and it starts with me.”

Actually, it started with Chief Larry O’Dea, and his camping trip with buddies last year. Opting to retire last June after he was accused of trying to cover up his shooting of a friend, he now faces a misdemeano­r charge of negligent wounding.

O’Dea told a county investigat­or that the friend had somehow shot himself in the back while they and others, sitting in a row of folding chairs, picked off sage rats running past them.

But an Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife follow-up investigat­ion quoted the friend as saying O’Dea later personally admitted to shooting him. The chief had gone to a nearby beverage cooler and reportedly fired his .22-caliber rifle by accident. The wounded man was released from a hospital after a few days.

O’Dea was replaced by Marshman in June. The new interim replacemen­t for Marshman, Assistant Chief Chris Davis, is the city’s fourth chief or interim leader in two years.

The search for a permanent chief continues, and the mayor has said that Marshman remains a possible candidate. Wheeler says he expects to complete his nationwide search for a new police leader by summer.

Anderson is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Stephanie Yao Long Oregonian ?? PROTESTERS DENOUNCE February’s fatal police shooting of black teenager Quanice Hayes by a white officer. Hayes’ mother is seeking a federal investigat­ion.
Stephanie Yao Long Oregonian PROTESTERS DENOUNCE February’s fatal police shooting of black teenager Quanice Hayes by a white officer. Hayes’ mother is seeking a federal investigat­ion.
 ?? Dave Killen Oregonian ?? MIKE MARSHMAN is on leave after taking over for the previous chief, charged in an accidental shooting.
Dave Killen Oregonian MIKE MARSHMAN is on leave after taking over for the previous chief, charged in an accidental shooting.

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