Los Angeles Times

Police under watchful eyes

Citizen videos document troubling violence and aggression

- By James Queally, Kevin Rector and Richard Winton

In one video, at least eight Los Angeles police officers surround a woman lying in a Hollywood street as the buzz of a Taser fills the air. People scream from apartment balconies for the officers, who appear to be firing the stun gun at the woman, to stop.

In another video, an LAPD vehicle barrels into a crowd of protesters in Pershing Square, nearly driving over one before backing up and speeding away as demonstrat­ors throw objects at the car.

On Tuesday, footage of a curfew arrest in Hollywood ends with the unarmed arrestee held at gunpoint and pleading for mercy as a police radio squawks with orders for officers to take anyone they see into custody. In L.A. County, sheriff ’s deputies in one video appear to shoot pellets out of a moving vehicle at young men on the street, and those in another video punch and knee a young man on the ground in Compton.

With cellphone cameras everywhere and social media providing a livestream of unpreceden­ted protests against police brutality, there has been a steady

stream of new videos showing troubling police behavior.

It will take time for a full assessment of how police in Southern California performed and how widespread cases of misconduct have been. Protesters and some civil liberties activists have slammed the police tactics as unacceptab­le. And even city leaders admit there have been problemati­c incidents and have called for investigat­ions and reforms based on what has emerged so far.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said the LAPD would reduce the use of foam rounds after many complains from protesters who were hit by the projectile­s. The mayor also said Wednesday that he would support the creation of a special prosecutor to review officer criminal misconduct cases, a longtime demand of activists.

The Times reviewed more than a dozen videos and shared several with police officials for comment. Josh Rubenstein, a police spokesman, said officers have been responding for days to “dynamic and at times dangerous situations” and have had rocks and bottles thrown at them.

But Rubenstein declined to provide explanatio­ns for the specific actions of officers caught in videos that have gone viral, including several in which officers can be seen aggressive­ly beating nonviolent protesters with their batons.

The Rodney King beating 29 years ago and riots the following year sparked major reforms in the LAPD that have continued over the last few decades. That includes rules around the use of force, restrictio­ns on holds and using flashlight­s as weapons, and more recently deescalati­on training designed to make officers less likely to get into violent altercatio­ns with people. Even some longtime LAPD critics have said the department has made progress.

But the protests of the last week show much more needs to be done, they said.

“It’s nothing but a confirmati­on of what black activists have been saying for decades — that police abuse and excessive force is real,” said Najee Ali, a longtime South Los Angeles civil rights leader. “Now, with the spread of social media and everyone having a cellphone, we can actually document what we feel is abuse. We finally have the proof.”

Ali said he and other leaders plan to gather outside LAPD headquarte­rs Thursday morning to demand an audience with LAPD Chief Michel Moore and L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva, to share videos community members have gathered so that officials can launch investigat­ions.

They aren’t alone in demanding answers.

In recent days, the Police Commission and two City Council members have called on the department to review its use of force during the demonstrat­ions. The department’s tactics also have come under fire from business owners, who say responding officers have repeatedly opted to arrest nonviolent protesters instead of looters at various scenes across the city.

Amid nationwide protests over the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s police custody, former President Obama urged every mayor in the nation Wednesday to review their cities’ police use-of-force policies and commit to needed reforms.

While Moore, Villanueva and Garcetti have largely commended officers for their handling of the unrest in recent days, they too have acknowledg­ed that problems have arisen. Moore has said internal affairs officers are working around the clock to investigat­e specific incidents — including the one in which a patrol vehicle was driven into protesters.

Rubenstein said complaints could be filed with the department’s Profession­al Standards Bureau toll-free at (800) 339-6868, or with the inspector general at (213) 893-6400 or oigcomp@lapd.online.

Villanueva said his department is investigat­ing misconduct allegation­s and videos of potential misconduct. He said the scene in Compton came after an officer “narrowly escaped being killed by fleeing looters” in a vehicle, and the one in which officers are seen shooting out of a vehicle — which was retweeted to millions of people by rapper Lil Nas X — involved pepper balls being deployed. Both incidents are under investigat­ion.

Some protesters and other police reform advocates say a reckoning is needed, beginning with the ouster of Moore — who was forced to apologize this week after he said looters were as responsibl­e for Floyd’s death as the officer who knelt on the man’s neck — and continuing with criminal charges for officers caught assaulting people. Garcetti and some police commanders have expressed support for Moore.

There is no question officers face unusual challenges. Though the vast majority of the protests have been peaceful, some people have thrown objects at officers and more than two dozen have been injured. One had his skull fractured. It’s unclear how many protesters have suffered injuries. Looters hit scores of businesses, smashing windows and stealing merchandis­e.

But several witnesses say the police actions have been intentiona­l and inexcusabl­e.

Nicholas Flickinger, a 29year-old social worker who recorded the video of officers in Hollywood piling on top of a woman, said he has had to call police for help multiple times at work, but images like the one he recorded Tuesday left him feeling an animosity toward law enforcemen­t that he’d never felt before.

“The way the LAPD has dealt with everything, I’ve never felt so anti-police or LAPD,” he said. “I’ve always been of the opinion that there’s good and bad in every group … but even if there’s a majority of good officers, they’re not doing anything. It sounds like the cliche, canned thing, but they’re all complicit in what’s going on.”

Jonathan Uttenreith­er, 48, of Hollywood said he was near a police skirmish line on 3rd Street in the Fairfax district Saturday when police started advancing, firing foam rounds “indiscrimi­nately” into the crowd.

“They were not aiming low, that was clear,” he said.

As he started to flee, he saw a young woman also running away suddenly drop to the ground. Rushing to her aid, he realized she had been hit in the back of the head with one of the police projectile­s. As blood ran down her neck and he and another man tried to carry her away, rounds popped off the ground around them, one grazing his arm.

“I realized the police were still firing on us as we were attempting to carry this wounded woman off the street. They were intentiona­lly shooting at us,” Uttenreith­er said.

The fact that such actions were part of an orchestrat­ed police response is outrageous, he said.

“It crushes hope that there’s any intention from the police to force themselves or the politician­s that control them to have any accountabi­lity,” he said. “It’s like the police putting themselves at war with the population they are supposed to be serving rather than attempting to deescalate and solve problems.”

 ?? Nicholas Flickinger ?? A STILL from video shows LAPD officers in Hollywood swarming a woman immobilize­d by a stun gun. Bystanders yelled for them to stop.
Nicholas Flickinger A STILL from video shows LAPD officers in Hollywood swarming a woman immobilize­d by a stun gun. Bystanders yelled for them to stop.

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