Los Angeles Times

Here’s how to boost police accountabi­lity

Campaign donations bind elected prosecutor­s to law enforcemen­t unions. It’s time to cut those ties.

- Mid reports from

Aacross the country about escalating clashes between protesters and law enforcemen­t, it’s worth looking underneath the images for the roots of the outrage. It is the extrajudic­ial killings of unarmed people by police, and not the protests against them, that too often spark the cycle of violence and death in the United States. It is the cruel and unyielding knee on the neck of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, and thousands of other police officer knees, fists and trigger fingers that undermine public safety and instill fear.

That’s why we need to demand accountabi­lity and change from law enforcemen­t and the criminal justice establishm­ent that too often shrug at police violence.

The ties that bind elected officials to police unions must be broken. Elected prosecutor­s should reject donations and endorsemen­ts from law enforcemen­t labor groups, because union support compromise­s a prosecutor’s independen­ce and clouds the decision over whether to criminally charge police who abuse their power. It diminishes a D.A.’s incentive to seek out and share with defense lawyers — as the 6th Amendment requires — the names of officers whose past misconduct undermines their value as prosecutio­n witnesses. It undercuts a D.A.’s impulse to fight laws that hide from the public the names of problem officers.

Bar associatio­ns should revise their ethics rules to forbid candidates for district attorney (and city prosecutor and state’s attorney) to accept police union money. Lawmakers should adopt laws to prohibit the practice — although they will find it easier to do if they, too, say no to police union largess.

Police unions have every right to advocate for their members’ pay and benefits. But one of their tasks is to defend officers in misconduct cases, and that makes the conflict of interest readily apparent. An elected official considerin­g whether to prosecute officers should not be, in essence, on the political payroll of the agency defending the very same people.

A handful of unions criticized the officers involved in the death of Floyd. But police unions are generally the loudest voices defending bad officers and dismissing reasonable efforts to improve officer performanc­e. A case in point: Minneapoli­s police union leader Bob Kroll is a strong supporter of President Trump at least in part because of the president’s contempt for the 2015 recommenda­tions of the federal Task Force on 21st Century Policing. Many law enforcemen­t unions decried the task force’s call for sensible steps to boost police transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, enhance oversight and improve relationsh­ips with policed communitie­s, all in order to build public trust.

It was a lost opportunit­y, and we are now paying the steep price. Public trust in police is lacking because of actions like the killing of Floyd. Relationsh­ips that might have permitted a more constructi­ve response to his death were not built.

Even before the Floyd killing, reform advocates began calling for police budgets to be slashed and the money spent instead on social services. Lower funding translates into fewer officers, however, which in turn leads to precisely the occupation-style approach to policing that causes such tension here and in other U.S. cities.

The L.A. Police Protective League didn’t raise money directly for incumbent Los Angeles Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey’s campaign this year, but it did put up $1 million to defeat her reform-oriented opponent, George Gascón. (The Times has endorsed Gascón.) It was an independen­t expenditur­e, and as such it backed the candidate without necessaril­y creating the same kind of conflict of interest as a direct donation.

On Sunday, Lacey issued a rather weak statement regarding the “culminatio­n of injustice,” decrying violent protests and expressing sympathy to Floyd’s family. It made no mention of police or the cause of Floyd’s death.

Meanwhile, a group of more than 40 district attorneys put out a statement Thursday calling for structural changes in the criminal justice system along the lines of the task force recommenda­tions, including severing the financial link between elected prosecutor­s and police unions. Lacey was invited to sign. For now, at least, she has not.

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