Nonshooting deaths involving Metro slip through the cracks
When a Metro Police officer shoots and kills someone, the death sparks a clear review process: from providing information to the public to evaluating whether policies should be changed and whether an officer should be charged for his or her role in the fatality.
But Metro’s nonshooting fatalities do not always receive the same degree of attention because the review process for investigating deaths was designed primarily to address those involving firearms.
That system was established after media reports revealed a distrubing pattern and a lack of officer accountability in officer-involved shootings within Metro.
In early 2012, Metro began working with the Justice Department on an in-depth review of police practices to reduce officer-involved shootings. The review became known as the Collaborative Reform Initiative. That resulted in dozens of recommended changes to Metro’s policies — most focused on the use of firearms and officer accountability — in addition to other reforms the department already had begun.
“We wanted to improve upon our training, and we wanted to eliminate and reduce the number of officer-involved shootings,” said James Larochelle, then-deputy chief of Metro’s investigative services division. He has since retired.
By the end of 2012, the number of shootings by Metro police dropped 37% from the previous year, according to a Justice Department assessment.
Because of Collaborative Reform’s emphasis on reducing shootings by officers and establishing a more detailed review protocol when they occurred, experts say Metro became a leading model for police reform in the state.
Now, when an officer uses “deadly force,” Metro’s Critical Incident Review Team examines the case and provides findings and recommendations related to department policy. Metro’s Force Investigation Team conducts a separate investigation into whether an involved officer’s conduct violated any laws and the team’s reports are passed onto the district attorney for review.
Larochelle said the Critical Incident Review Team would “look at policy against an officer’s performance a hundred times” in any given year to determine whether changes are needed.
But in two 2021 restraint
deaths, Metro completed only “dead body” reports, which include basic information about what happened in a case. The Force Investigation Team did not complete a report on either death. And the Critical Incident Review Team didn’t evaluate to determine whether the officer had violated policy or if potential policy changes were needed.
Nonshooting deaths resulting from police encounters are also handled differently by the Clark County district attorney, the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University found.
The prosecutor’s office conducts a legal review of all police shootings to determine whether an officer’s conduct was legally justified. But the agency never issued opinions on nearly half of the nonshooting death cases the Howard Center identified in Las Vegas as part of an investigation with The Associated Press.
The district attorney’s office declined requests for a phone interview or to respond to written questions. The office instead pointed to its protocol for police use of force, which the policy says applies to “any use of force incident in Clark County by a law enforcement officer” that results in a death. The policy requires an on-call prosecutor to respond to the scene of an in-custody death and conduct a “thorough, objective and professional investigation” to determine whether criminal charges will be filed.
Even when the district attorney does screen a case, it’s rare for police to be criminally charged.
Of the 12 deaths in Nevada the Howard Center identified, prosecutors pursued charges against just one officer, and a grand jury ultimately declined to indict him.
The lack of a district attorney opinion or review eliminates a potential avenue for police accountability in these cases, observers say.
“They need to be held responsible in a way that we don’t hold other people responsible,” said Frank Rudy Cooper, a law professor and policing expert at the UNLV. “They’re wielding deadly force on all of our behalf.”