Los Angeles Times

LAPD officers criticize leaders

After summer unrest, rank and file felt unsupporte­d by Chief Moore, survey shows.

- By Richard Winton and Kevin Rector

Nearly 9 out of 10 Los Angeles Police Department officers did not feel supported by Chief Michel Moore and did not believe he or other commanders provided strong leadership during recent protests and unrest, according to a summer survey conducted by the officers’ union.

Many officers said Moore should resign, accusing him in comments they submitted with the survey of “cowering” to Black Lives Matter protesters, “pandering” to city politician­s and “not having an organized plan” during the unrest, the union said.

Nearly 70% of respond

ents said the department was unprepared for the protests, which followed the May police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, and close to 40% said they were thinking of leaving the force.

The results, published this week in the union’s Thin Blue Line newsletter, ref lect low morale among officers at a critical time in American policing and should raise alarms for Angelenos about the LAPD’s path forward at a time of increasing violence, said officials of the union, the Los Angeles Police Protective League.

“It speaks loud and clear what the membership thinks about the direction the department is going right now. They’re starving for leadership both from the chief and from his command staff. It’s obvious,” said Craig Lally, the union president. “It just doesn’t seem like law enforcemen­t and public safety is a priority in this city.

More than 2,700 of the department’s 10,000- plus sworn members participat­ed in the survey, union officials said.

Moore, in a statement provided to officers, struck a conciliato­ry tone and promised to “do better.”

“First, I mean to expressly acknowledg­e that I hear you, see you, and am committed to doing a better job as your Chief,” Moore wrote. “Second, I apologize to those of you who I failed by my actions or words. I believed in my heart each action was the right thing to do. However, there are things that I wish I could go back in time and do over.”

Moore, who has faced calls to resign from protesters and other activists, promised to “get back up and strive to do better.”

Moore declined through a spokesman to discuss the survey results beyond his statement to the union.

The vote underscore­s the political balancing act Moore faces as he tries to address concerns about policing from activists and some in government while also keeping morale up inside his department. He is already dealing with cuts to the police budget — which are less than what some critics are

demanding — while grappling with a surge in homicides and shootings this year.

Law enforcemen­t experts said the survey reflects a long trend in policing, wherein officers and police unions complain about leadership whenever they are confronted with broad societal criticisms — which force elected officials and police commanders to acknowledg­e mistakes, implement reforms and scrutinize officers’ actions more closely.

“One thing to recognize about policing, as with many institutio­ns, is that there is a significan­t gap between management and rank and f ile, in which street cops often feel that management cops are adversarie­s rather than supporters,” said Eric Miller, a professor at Loyola Law School who focuses on policing issues. “Historical­ly, we’ve seen that civilian calls for reform often result in some policy changes at the top from the police command staff that are then deeply resented and resisted by the rank and file.”

Merrick Bobb, a former

federal monitor of the Seattle Police Department and former special counsel to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s who advised the Christophe­r Commission after the L. A. unrest in 1992, said he felt Moore “had handled himself quite well in recent protests and had taken steps to work with all sides,” but may be paying a price among the rank and f ile for “trying to establish open lines of communicat­ions with the community and activists.”

Protests occurred downtown, in the Fairfax district and elsewhere in the city in late May and early June. While many remained peaceful, several devolved into chaos, with arsons and burglaries occurring, among other property damage. Police responded by forming skirmish lines, declaring the gatherings unlawful and then using hard- foam projectile­s and batons to clear crowds. Many officers and protesters were injured.

The entire response is now under review, both by the department and by the National Police Foundation

on behalf of the Police Commission. The department is also facing several lawsuits over its tactics, including its use of hard- foam projectile­s — which badly wounded some protesters.

According to the union survey, Moore got high marks for going out to the Fairfax protests and being on the ground as things escalated. However, officers panned the chief for kneeling with protesters — a sign, to them, that he was capitulati­ng to a violent crowd. Many questioned why he did not highlight more of the positives about officers as protests spawned more and more questions about LAPD behavior, the union said.

Some officers said that curfews should have been better handled and communicat­ed to crowds. Some said officers should have been equipped with more weapons, such as pepper balls and tear gas. Some said the National Guard should have been called in earlier. Others criticized how officers were deployed, and suggested they needed better training to handle large

crowds.

Moore in June acknowledg­ed racial inequities in American society, and said that, by kneeling, he meant to show his willingnes­s to listen. He has said that some mistakes were made in the department’s response to the protests, but defended the work of police overall as appropriat­e in the face of violence and destructio­n. He also has spoken out for officers more forcefully after recent events, like the celebratio­ns of the Lakers and Dodgers victories, led to destructio­n.

In his response to the survey, Moore acknowledg­ed officers’ concerns, saying that he had recently launched “hands- on crowd control training to improve our readiness for riotous violence not seen in decades,” and “issued protective equipment for new threats such as eye wear for green lasers and riot shields for projectile­s.”

He acknowledg­ed that recent budget cuts will mean the department will have a smaller workforce, but told officers he “will continue to be vocal toward our elected officials, our communitie­s, the media, and critics so that I can more effectivel­y tell your story.”

The survey marks the first time an LAPD chief has had his leadership openly and directly challenged by officers and the union in nearly two decades, but stops short of past rebukes.

In January 2002, the union held an official noconfiden­ce vote over the leadership of Chief Bernard Parks, and 93% of respondent­s said they wanted Parks gone. Within nine months, Parks was replaced by Chief William J. Bratton.

Bratton had widespread support among officers, and Bratton’s successor Charlie Beck, known as a skilled deal- maker, also avoided the union’s wrath.

Lally said the union has no plans to hold an official no- confidence vote for Moore, in part because union officials don’t believe that Mayor Eric Garcetti — another target of officers’ ire in the survey comments — would replace Moore with anyone better.

The survey does not represent a direct threat to Moore’s tenure at the top of the LAPD, in part because he still enjoys political support, including from Garcetti.

“2020 has been an enormously challengin­g year for everyone. All City department­s, including the LAPD, have been asked to do more with less — and Chief Moore, and the men and women of our police department, have answered that call. I am proud of the heroic work they do to keep Los Angeles safe every day,” Garcetti said in a statement Monday to The Times. “The Chief has led the LAPD with resolve and compassion through one of the toughest years it has ever faced. I have full confidence in him, our officers, and the work they’re doing to lead in 21st century policing and get our city through these very difficult times.”

Steve Soboroff, a member of the Los Angeles Police Commission, which oversees Moore and the department, said he and other commission­ers also have confidence in Moore.

 ?? A SURVEY Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? of more than 2,700 LAPD off icers showed almost 90% did not feel supported by Chief Michel Moore, while nearly 70% said the department was unprepared for protests over the killing of George Floyd.
A SURVEY Al Seib Los Angeles Times of more than 2,700 LAPD off icers showed almost 90% did not feel supported by Chief Michel Moore, while nearly 70% said the department was unprepared for protests over the killing of George Floyd.

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