Los Angeles Times

The ABCs of Charter Amendment C

Voters will decide on LAPD discipline overhaul measure.

- By Kate Mather and David Zahniser

The Los Angeles Police Department’s disciplina­ry system is complicate­d and often criticized, drawing complaints from both inside and outside the department.

Some officers feel they are treated inconsiste­ntly or unfairly. Department brass has said disciplina­ry panels routinely impede the chief ’s desire to fire problem officers. Outsiders are frustrated that the board’s activities are kept confidenti­al under state law.

The department’s disciplina­ry process could undergo one of the most significan­t changes in decades if Los Angeles voters approve

Charter Amendment C on Tuesday’s ballot. Here’s a breakdown of the measure.

What would Charter Amendment C change about the LAPD’s disciplina­ry system?

Under the current system, LAPD officers facing serious discipline — usually terminatio­ns — have their cases heard by a disciplina­ry panel, formally known as a Board of Rights. Currently, those panels are made up of two high-ranking officers and one civilian.

If approved by voters, Charter Amendment C would revise the City Charter to allow officers the option of having their cases heard by three-person boards composed entirely of civilians.

Who are the civilians who sit on the panels?

Hired by the Police Commission and paid for their

work, civilian panelists must have at least seven years of experience with arbitratio­n, mediation or similar work — preferably residents of Los Angeles. Thirty-eight people currently are civilian panelists, most of them attorneys or profession­al arbitrator­s.

Amid complaints from opponents that the requiremen­ts exclude too many Angelenos, some city lawmakers have signaled an interest in exploring how to expand the pool of candidates.

Who supports Charter Amendment C? The Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union that sponsored the campaign for Charter Amendment C, along with Mayor Eric Garcetti, Council President Herb Wesson and every member of the City Council all support the measure.

Who opposes it ?

Organizati­ons that focus heavily on police accountabi­lity are campaignin­g against the measure, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, Black Lives Matter, Los Angeles Community Action Network and Community Coalition. United Teachers Los Angeles, the League of Women Voters of Los Angeles and other groups have also come out against Charter Amendment C.

What does LAPD Chief Charlie Beck think?

Beck has not publicly expressed a position, saying recently he did not think it would be appropriat­e to do so. He did, however, point to a city report — one that relied heavily on LAPD statistics — that concluded civilians on the disciplina­ry panels tend to be more lenient than their sworn counterpar­ts. Civilians, Beck said, “tend to be less likely to hold officers accountabl­e.”

“I think the changes proposed in C would exacerbate that,” he added.

How did it get on Tuesday’s ballot?

Charter Amendment C was the product of extensive talks between Garcetti and the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which represents roughly 9,800 LAPD officers and has significan­t political clout at City Hall.

The mayor’s top public safety advisor worked on the issue for more than a year with the union, which sought changes to the LAPD’s disciplina­ry process.

Those talks have prompted critics to portray the ballot measure as the product of a backroom deal between Garcetti and the union, which endorsed the mayor during his recent reelection campaign. Organizati­ons that focus heavily on policing say they were locked out of the conversati­on — and were only asked to weigh in after the measure was a done deal.

Backers of the measure dispute that it is a backroom deal, saying voters will have the final say this week.

Why do supporters like Charter Amendment C?

The police union and city officials say officers have long felt that they won’t be treated fairly by a disciplina­ry panel on which twothirds of the members work under a police chief who is suggesting serious punishment.

They point to lawsuits filed by a handful of LAPD captains alleging retaliatio­n for going against Beck in a decision about discipline.

Allowing the option of allcivilia­n disciplina­ry panels, supporters say, will help assure officers that they’ll get a fair hearing.

“We have four current lawsuits against the city from senior officers,” Deputy Mayor Jeff Gorell said in a recent interview. “All of them include the accusation that there was retributio­n as a result of their decisions at a Board of Rights. So whether there’s reality there, or whether there’s just the perception of influence, the systems of discipline are only as good as people’s belief that they’re being treated fairly.”

Backers say the change would also expand civilian oversight of the department.

Why are groups fighting it?

Opponents of the measure also have major complaints about the LAPD’s disciplina­ry system — pointing out that the hearings and decisions are kept secret.

But they argue that Charter Amendment C is a bad remedy that could result in more lenient treatment of misbehavin­g LAPD officers.

They point to the city report, issued in January, that concluded civilians are less severe than their sworn counterpar­ts when weighing LAPD disciplina­ry cases. They also say Charter Amendment C does not allow for true civilian participat­ion, because most residents don’t have seven years of arbitratio­n-like experience required for the job.

Finally, critics contend the mayor’s behind-thescenes talks with the union show that elected officials were intent from the beginning on delivering a “political favor” to a powerful constituen­cy.

“This isn’t how policy should be made. If elected officials are interested in public policy, they should invite input from all stakeholde­rs and experts and have a public process to reach the best result possible,” said Peter Bibring of the ACLU of Southern California. “That’s not what happened here.” What exactly did that city report say?

The report, prepared for city lawmakers using LAPD data, looked at 287 Board of Rights hearings held from 2011 to late 2016. In 190 of those cases, officers were found guilty of the accusation­s. Fewer than half of the officers Beck sent to a Board of Rights to be fired were terminated.

The report found that the civilian panelists were “consistent­ly more lenient” than the sworn members. There were 39 cases in which Beck had suggested an officer be fired, but a board acquitted the officer instead, the report said. In all those cases, the civilian voted to acquit.

Supporters of Charter Amendment C say the numbers don’t back up claims that civilians are too lenient. Union officials have said that cases are rarely decided by a divided vote. Out of 229 cases in which Beck recommende­d terminatio­n, just 7% involved decisions in which the civilian member was more lenient than at least one of his or her sworn counterpar­ts.

There were no cases in which a civilian voted for a harsher outcome.

Why do voters make decisions about the LAPD’s disciplina­ry system anyway?

The Board of Rights system is outlined in the City Charter, the city’s governing document, whose language can be changed only by voters.

Although the Board of Rights hearings were establishe­d in 1935, it wasn’t until 1992 that civilians were added to the panels as part of Charter Amendment F— a police reform measure that won overwhelmi­ng support from voters on the heels of the Rodney King beating.

This year, opponents say such an important issue should not have been put before voters in an election that is expected to have extremely low turnout. There are no citywide candidates on the ballot, and only two of the council’s 15 seats are up for grabs Tuesday.

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