Baltimore Sun

Gun Trace Task Force probe begins

‘Everything is on the table,’ Sen. Ferguson says after commission’s first meeting

- By Justin Fenton jfenton@baltsun.com twitter.com/justin_fenton

Members of a state commission created to look into the Baltimore Police Gun Trace Task Force scandal convened their first meeting in Annapolis on Tuesday, with a state senator offering a sobering assessment of the state of the city to emphasize the importance of their work.

State Sen. Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, said the Commission to Restore Trust in Policing “truly may be one of the last hopes our city has to restore trust in the fundamenta­l nature of democracy in government.”

“When that’s broken, all of it is broken, and I fear that’s where we may be,” Ferguson said.

Ferguson said the panel should find out “who knew, what did they know, when did they know it, why didn’t they say something. How deep does it go? … How could the system have failed this badly for this long?”

“Most importantl­y, how do we make sure this never, ever, ever happens again?” he said.

The panel, approved by the General Assembly and signed into law by Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, will look into systemic problems that helped the rogue police unit commit crimes for years as well as uncovering new facts. Their charge includes exploring a reorganiza­tion of the police department and the dynamic between state and city oversight.

“I think everything is on the table,” Ferguson said after the meeting.

While Mayor Catherine E. Pugh previously opposed creation of the commission, some city leaders have been pushing for increased city control of the police department, which is, through a quirk of law, a state agency.

Though the federal trial of the officers aired a wide array of details about what the officers did, the police department has not offered a public accounting of the scandal. Only last week did a police internal affairs commander tell Baltimore City Council members that seven officers are under investigat­ion connected to the task force. Two other officers were investigat­ed and cleared, Lt. Col. LaTonya Lewis said.

Such internal investigat­ions have been kept confidenti­al, with police citing state law. Just last week, interim Commission­er Gary Tuggle wrote in an email to city council members that discussing such investigat­ions in any way would be a “criminal offense.”

“Thus, I cannot and will not provide you with any additional informatio­n. Additional­ly, I ask that you no longer make inquires of this nature with any member of the department,” Tuggle wrote in the email, which was obtained by The Baltimore Sun.

Eight task force officers were convicted of federal racketeeri­ng charges, and those sentenced so far are serving between seven and 25 years in federal prison.

Convicted officers who became government cooperator­s outlined how the officers regularly violated citizens’ rights, conducted illegal searches, tracked people without warrants, stole drugs and money, and took unearned overtime pay. They generally did not fear getting caught, saying it was “part of the culture.”

The ringleader, Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, admitted to an array of crimes including lying about drugs that police had planted on an innocent man. Jenkins also stole and resold dirt bikes, conspired with a Baltimore County bail bondsman to sell $1 million worth of drugs Jenkins had taken off the street, and carried around tools and masks to carry out robberies.

The police department, already under a federal consent decree and facing the worst large-city murder rate in the country, has had three police commission­ers this year alone. Prosecutor­s said earlier in the year they were reviewing thousands of potentiall­y tainted cases, while civil liability from lawsuits brought against the city “is immeasurab­le,” Ferguson said.

The panel is chaired by retired U.S. District Judge Alexander Williams, and consists of six other members selected by Hogan, Senate President Thomas V. “Mike” Miller, and House Speaker Michael E. Busch.

The members are Gary McLhinney, a former city police union president who now oversees standards for the prison system; attorney Sean Malone; Ashiah Parker, of the No Boundaries Coalition; West Baltimore resident Inez Robb; former Howard County Police chief and state Sen. James Robey; and Alicia Wilson, a resident and vice president with Sagamore Developmen­t.

The first meeting was preliminar­y, with commission members being introduced to legislativ­e services staff who will be assisting them, and picking dates for future meetings. Commission members requested an array of documents and informatio­n for staff to begin gathering, including trial transcript­s, police department policies and the names of prosecutor­s who handled the gun unit’s cases before their indictment.

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