Albuquerque Journal

Judge OKs team of outside investigat­ors to help APD

Members will work with internal affairs

- BY ELISE KAPLAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Following a federal court hearing Friday afternoon, U.S. District Judge James Browning signed off on a stipulated order from the city of Albuquerqu­e and the Department of Justice proposing the creation of an outside team to assist the Albuquerqu­e Police Department’s internal affairs force division with investigat­ions into all but the most minor uses of force.

Browning said he expects to issue a written opinion on the matter in April in response to the comments he heard in court.

Under the order, the city will hire an administra­tor who will hire an as yet undecided number of investigat­ors for the External Force Investigat­ion Team. The outside investigat­ors will accompany internal affairs detectives to the scene after an APD officer uses force on a person that causes injury, hospitaliz­ation or death. The external investigat­or will be privy to all evidence, documents and investigat­ive notes, and will evaluate the quality of the internal investigat­or’s work, notifying APD and attorneys if there are any deficienci­es.

The city hopes to have the administra­tor in place in early May to start hiring the team. The city will try to return full responsibi­lity to the internal investigat­ors within nine months, but that time frame could be extended, if needed.

The city has been working its way through a Court Approved Settlement Agreement since 2014, when the DOJ found APD officers had a pattern and practice of using excessive force and violating citizens’ rights. Last October, the independen­t monitor overseeing the agreement warned that APD was on the “brink of a catastroph­ic failure.”

At Friday’s hearing, Paul Killebrew, an attorney with the DOJ’s civil rights division, said the motion was necessary because, after six years, the police department is still not holding officers accountabl­e for using force that is out of policy.

“What we have is a city that has failed to comply with that court order over and over and over again,” Killebrew said. “It’s not an option right now to do nothing. If we sit back and wait, and use all the tools we’ve been using, I don’t know why we would expect things to change on their own.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States