San Francisco Chronicle

Police in misconduct cases on force through arbitratio­n

- By Martha Bellisle Martha Bellisle is an Associated Press writer.

SEATTLE — An Oregon police officer lost his job and then returned to work after fatally shooting an unarmed Black man in the back. A Florida sergeant was let go six times for using excessive force and stealing from suspects, while a Texas lieutenant was terminated five times after being accused of striking two women, making threatenin­g calls and committing other infraction­s.

These officers and hundreds of others across the country were fired, sometimes repeatedly, for violating policies but got their jobs back after appealing their cases to an arbitrator who overturned their discipline — an alltoocomm­on practice that some experts in law and in policing say stands in the way of real accountabi­lity.

“Arbitratio­n inherently undermines police decisions,” said Michael Gennaco, a police reform expert and former federal civil rights prosecutor who specialize­d in police misconduct cases. “It’s dismaying to see arbitrator­s regularly putting people back to work.”

The killing of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapoli­s police officer sparked weeks of protests and calls for reforms, but experts say arbitratio­n can block those efforts.

Arbitratio­n, the appeals process used by most law enforcemen­t agencies, contribute­s to officer misconduct, limits public oversight and dampens morale, said Stephen Rushin, a Loyola University Chicago law professor who last year published a study on arbitratio­n in the University of Pennsylvan­ia Law Review.

“Police arbitratio­n on appeal is one of the single most important accountabi­lity issues in the country,” he said. “You can’t change an organizati­on if you have to keep employing people that you know are going to do bad things.”

Generally, when a misconduct complaint is filed against an officer, it’s investigat­ed internally and if a policy violation occurred, the chief or other official may order discipline ranging from oral reprimand to suspension to terminatio­n.

An officer who objects can appeal to an arbitrator. Each state and municipali­ty is different, but this is the most common process. Police unions argue that arbitratio­n is less expensive and less timeconsum­ing than going to court, so it’s written into their contracts.

Arbitrator­s are usually lawyers who focus on labor law, and in most cases they have the final word. The process can take years. Officers who are fired and reinstated can get back pay for the time they weren’t working.

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