Los Angeles Times

Grand jury is critical of police pursuits

The chases are ‘causing unnecessar­y bystander injuries and deaths,’ a Los Angeles County panel says.

- By James Queally

Police chases in Los Angeles County are “causing unnecessar­y bystander injuries and deaths,” and law enforcemen­t officers need better training to reduce the risk of crashes during highspeed pursuits, according to a new report by the county’s civil grand jury.

The report comes after a data analysis by the Los Angeles Times showed that 1 in 10 car chases initiated by the Los Angeles Police Department from 2006 to 2014 resulted in injuries to civilians.

The grand jury said both the LAPD and the county Sheriff’s Department need to improve training for officers who engage in pursuits, and it questioned the need to chase suspects in nonviolent crimes.

The Sheriff’s Department’s training center is in dire need of an upgrade, the report said.

Citing data provided by the California Highway Patrol, the grand jury report found that 17% of the car chases that took place in the county in a 12-month period beginning in October 2015 ended in a crash that could have resulted in injury or death. Two-thirds of those 421 pursuits ended in arrests.

Over the same period, three fleeing drivers were killed and 45 people were injured, including suspects, their passengers or officers, the report said.

“Is this the best balance that can be realized between law enforcemen­t goals and the risk of unintended consequenc­es?” the grand jury report asked.

The report also cited a national study conducted by the Internatio­nal Assn. of Chiefs of Police that found that 91% of high-speed chases were initiated in response to nonviolent crimes. The study, which reviewed about 8,000 car chases, found that 42% of the pursuits involved a traffic infraction. A third of the chases were initiated after officers either noticed a stolen vehicle or suspected a driver of being intoxicate­d, the report said.

L.A. County Sheriff’s Capt. Scott Gage, who oversees training for the agency, agreed with the report’s assessment that deputies should spend more hours

for the dangers of high-speed pursuits. The agency has allocated funding for a new training facility and is waiting for a bid process to play out to begin constructi­on, Gage said.

The Sheriff’s Department has been involved in 318 pursuits in 2017, according to data released this week by the agency. Those chases resulted in the death of one civilian and injuries to nine others, records show.

In a statement, the LAPD said pursuits are “inherently dangerous and that is why the Los Angeles Police Department takes every step to develop tactics and mitigate the risk posed by these dangerous interactio­ns.”

The grand jury’s report, which was published in late June, is not binding or enforceabl­e, but both agencies will have to provide a written response to the findings within 90 days.

In calling on local law enforcemen­t agencies to revamp how they approach pursuits, the grand jury cited analyses by The Times showing that LAPD car chases have led to bystander injuries and deaths at twice the rate of pursuits in the rest of the state.

From 2006 to 2014, 1 in 10 LAPD pursuits resulted in an injury to a bystander, with 334 people hurt, according to a Times review of pursuit data reported to the California Highway Patrol. In 2015, LAPD pursuits injured more bystanders than in any other year for at least a decade.

The grand jury report also highlighte­d the death of Jack Phoenix, a 15-year-old who was decapitate­d in November 2015 when he was struck by a car fleeing the LAPD.

In court, an LAPD officer testified that police noticed a stolen vehicle and followed it along the 10 Freeway and into the Palms neighborho­od. The officer said she and her partner continued to follow the car at speeds topping 60 mph without turning on their lights or sirens. They did not try to stop the driver as he sped along Venice Boulevard, where he eventually struck the teenager.

The LAPD has said it does not consider the incident a pursuit. The driver, Paul Brumfield, was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 27 years in prison in April. Phoenix’s family is suing the LAPD.

“It’s ridiculous in this day and age, with the kinds of technologi­es that are available, that they would have to chase a guy through traffic like that,” said Nick Phoenix, the victim’s father, adding that he was happy to hear about a push for policy reform.

Previously, experts have described the LAPD’s pursuit policy as one of the most permissive in the state.

Officers in many other major cities in California, including San Francisco, San Jose and Long Beach, are allowed to chase only drivers who present an immediate danger to the public or are suspected of violent felonies. Los Angeles police, however, are allowed to chase motorists suspected of felonies or misdemeano­rs.

The LAPD also chases suspected drunk and reckless drivers more frequently than other department­s in the state, a practice that often is subject to criticism from policing experts, who say police are likely to cause already erratic drivers to betraining come more dangerous by pursuing them.

Sheriff’s deputies are also allowed to pursue suspected drunk drivers, but their policy is more restrictiv­e, Gage said.

Deputies are allowed to pursue a drunk driver only when the motorist is driving in an extremely dangerous manner, Gage said. Deputies must weigh the danger posed by the driver against the possible risks of a chase, he said.

“The deputy has to see the erratic, dangerous driving prior to them even trying to stop the vehicle. Then we’re gonna activate our lights and sirens, not just to stop the suspect, but as a duty to warn the public,” he said. “Once we initiate, there is going to be a constant evaluation, if we’re going to cause the suspect to drive more erraticall­y.”

The grand jury said the LAPD and Sheriff ’s Department should provide officers with recurring training on driving in pursuits and each department’s trainers should investigat­e injuries at pursuit crash scenes.

Grand jurors described the Sheriff’s Department’s pursuit training facility as “substandar­d” compared with the LAPD’s and called for improved and longer training for deputies.

The LAPD has been working on revisions to its pursuit policy since 2015, officials have previously told The Times, adding that the revisions were not in response to any public criticism of the department’s tactics. Nearly two years later, the policy revisions still are being negotiated with the union that represents rank-and-file officers, an LAPD spokesman said Tuesday.

Joanne Saliba, the grand jury forewoman, said she hopes the report leads to serious policy reform in both agencies, adding that some grand jurors were concerned that high-speed chases of low-priority suspects can endanger the lives of people who are simply going about their day.

“Many of them were concerned that these high-risk pursuits through urban areas at high speeds, especially for groups of people that haven’t committed a serious crime, seem to put the public at risk,” she said.

 ?? KTLA-TV ?? A CARJACKING suspect was killed by police after a pursuit in the South Gate area in June. From 2006 to 2014, bystanders were hurt in 1 in 10 LAPD pursuits.
KTLA-TV A CARJACKING suspect was killed by police after a pursuit in the South Gate area in June. From 2006 to 2014, bystanders were hurt in 1 in 10 LAPD pursuits.

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