Los Angeles Times

LAPD to assess its actions in Echo Park camp closure

Chief says city needs a more consistent policy on homeless sites

- By Kevin Rector and Emily Alpert Reyes

The Los Angeles Police Department will conduct an internal review of its handling of protests that erupted over the closure of Echo Park Lake and the clearing of a homeless encampment there last month, LAPD Chief Michel Moore said Tuesday.

In the meantime, he said, city officials should be clearer with the public about what they should expect if another park needs to be cleared. He specifical­ly called on Jose “Che” Ramirez, L.A.’s deputy mayor for homelessne­ss initiative­s, to take the lead in forming a more “consistent policy” for when and how public parks may be closed for safety and sanitation concerns related to homeless encampment­s in the future.

Moore said his intent was not to criticize Ramirez or other city officials involved in the Echo Park operation, which he thought was largely successful in connecting unhoused residents to city services, but to “stress the importance of moving forward as other communitie­s are asking about their park and instances in which homeless individual­s are encamped there.”

Moore made his comments to reporters Tuesday afternoon and during the civilian Police Commission’s virtual Zoom meeting Tues

day morning — its first since the closure of Echo Park two weeks ago led to two nights of protests in which LAPD officers clashed with demonstrat­ors along skirmish lines and declared the gatherings unlawful. The department made more than 180 arrests the second night, and several protesters, a photojourn­alist and a bystander have all claimed LAPD officers badly injured them in the fray.

Moore said the department will be assessing its strategy leading up to the park’s closure, which he said the LAPD helped monitor at the request of Council Member Mitch O’Farrell and other officials in Mayor Eric Garcetti’s office, as well as its tactics in the field once protesters poured into the area. He acknowledg­ed that officials had decided not to make the date of the park’s closure public until the night before but did not say who determined that or who was part of the discussion­s.

The review also will assess the department’s handling of journalist­s who were covering the protest, some of whom were detained and arrested, and its process for credential­ing reporters who cover unrest and other police matters in the field.

O’Farrell has argued that fencing off the park was a necessary step to address unsafe conditions at the park and that his office diligently worked to provide hotel rooms and other shelter to people camping along the lake, calling it “the single largest housing event in the history of the city.”

Alex Comisar, a spokespers­on for Garcetti, said the mayor considered it a “successful housing operation unpreceden­ted in scale.”

Comisar said that any similar efforts in other parks would be planned according to the individual circumstan­ces in those communitie­s. “Each neighborho­od, public space, and community of unhoused residents is unique — and moving forward successful­ly means working together to improve conditions block by block,” Comisar said.

The Echo Park operation has sharply divided Angelenos, some of whom excoriated the move, others of whom clamored to replicate it in their neighborho­ods.

Homeless activists have denounced the park closure as a forced eviction. Some former residents of the encampment told The Times they had ended up sleeping on sidewalks, and others feared they would wind up there after the end of Project Roomkey, a pandemic-related program that provided hotel rooms to many of the unhoused people moved out of Echo Park.

The closure of Echo Park also has spread concern that other encampment­s will soon face a similar fate. Pete White, executive director of the Los Angeles Community Action Network, said his group is concerned about the possibilit­y of another park closure.

Even if unhoused people are offered hotel rooms through Project Roomkey, “the fear is that in a few months’ time, those same folks will be right back on the streets,” White said. “There’s still no real conversati­on about what’s going to happen to folks” when the program ends.

“An offer of housing isn’t the same as an actual housing unit,” White added, arguing that a general offer may not account for the specific needs of an unhoused person or family. “If you’re using that offer of housing to justify closing an entire space or removing people, I think that’s problemati­c.”

His group has been watching MacArthur Park, where scores of homeless people have been camping, after park residents told the group they were hearing about new offers of shelter. A spokesman for Council Member Gil Cedillo, who represents the MacArthur Park area, said that outreach to homeless people in the park has been ongoing, but “the park will remain open and the same whether people choose to move indoors or stay under the stars.”

“No bed is conditione­d with a threat or planned action against them for staying in the park,” spokespers­on Conrado TerrazasCr­oss said in an email.

The LAPD’s planned “after-action” report comes in addition to several efforts by members of the City Council to gather informatio­n about the Echo Park closure. Last week, Council Members Mike Bonin and Nithya Raman sought a rundown of the costs of sending in scores of police as the park was fenced off, citing “tremendous public concern and consternat­ion regarding this deployment.”

O’Farrell, in turn, is pushing for a public accounting of the dangers and damage at Echo Park Lake, through two motions filed on Tuesday. One motion seeks reports from the LAPD and other city department­s on safety threats at Echo Park Lake over the last year, including “credible threats of violence to city personnel or property” as officials prepared to fence off the park.

The second motion seeks a report on the damage done to the iconic park, the estimated costs to repair it and a rundown of all personal property that was stored or confiscate­d when the park was closed, including items that could have been dangerous.

Although the council member had previously stated the park had sustained roughly $600,000 in damage, O’Farrell spokespers­on Dan Halden said the new motion would ensure “an additional layer of transparen­cy” on the spending.

O’Farrell, who has faced intense criticism over the Echo Park operation, said he also wants the LAPD to walk through its decisions about deploying officers during the closure.

Moore did not provide a timeline for when the afteractio­n report would be completed. The department still hasn’t produced a promised after-action report on last summer’s protests against police brutality.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A HOMELESS man stands in front of police near Echo Park. The closure of the encampment two weeks ago led to two nights of protests in which LAPD officers clashed with activists and declared the rallies unlawful.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A HOMELESS man stands in front of police near Echo Park. The closure of the encampment two weeks ago led to two nights of protests in which LAPD officers clashed with activists and declared the rallies unlawful.
 ?? Damian Dovarganes Associated press ?? AN ACTIVIST f lashes the peace sign as city sanitation employees begin work at Echo Park Lake.
Damian Dovarganes Associated press AN ACTIVIST f lashes the peace sign as city sanitation employees begin work at Echo Park Lake.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A PROTESTER offers a flower to officers during a rally over the Echo Park camp closure last month. The LAPD made over 180 arrests the second night of protests.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A PROTESTER offers a flower to officers during a rally over the Echo Park camp closure last month. The LAPD made over 180 arrests the second night of protests.

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