Los Angeles Times

LAPD lowers off-duty drinking limit

Officers who carry firearms away from work can’t exceed 0.04% blood alcohol.

- By Libor Jany

The Los Angeles Police Department has tightened its policy on off-duty officers drinking alcohol while armed, making it a violation for an officer to have a bloodalcoh­ol level of 0.04% or higher.

The civilian Police Commission, which oversees the department, voted Tuesday in favor of the policy. The change prohibits officers who are carrying firearms while off duty from drinking “to the extent that it causes impairment.”

The policy, however, limits who must submit to a test of their blood-alcohol level. Only officers “who exhibit objective symptoms of being under the influence of alcohol, or where there is reasonable and articulabl­e suspicion that the employee has consumed an alcoholic beverage, shall be required to submit to testing,” the policy reads.

The 0.04% blood-alcohol limit is half the legal limit for determinin­g whether someone is driving under the influence in California.

Tuesday’s votes comes several weeks after LAPD brass issued a department­wide bulletin cautioning cops not to drink and drive, following the arrests of seven officers on suspicion of getting behind the wheel while intoxicate­d.

LAPD Chief Michel Moore told commission­ers Tuesday that the recent episodes were a reflection of a surge in drinking during the pandemic.

The rule change capped a long-running debate over whether the department should tighten its rules on drinking. A 2021 Times story pointed to apparent failures by the department to develop clear policies despite multiple instances of drunk and armed off-duty officers allegedly causing trouble.

Alcohol abuse has been a persistent issue in the LAPD, as in other law enforcemen­t agencies, with many officers in Los Angeles investigat­ed each year for alleged drunk driving or other alcohol-related incidents.

Department statistics presented at the Police Commission meeting Tuesday showed that the department received at least 35 drug- and alcohol-related complaints last year, 18 of which led to arrests.

The problem has received scrutiny in the past as members of the Police Commission raised concerns about what they saw as the department’s lenient handling of such cases.

Under the previous chief, Charlie Beck, the department tried a new tack that showed leniency for an officer’s first offense but was followed by a lengthy suspension, or even terminatio­n, after a second incident. At the time, Beck said this progressiv­e discipline approach was an improvemen­t over the traditiona­l system, which allowed officers with several alcohol-related incidents to remain on the job and doled out incrementa­lly more severe punishment­s.

The policy of the other large law enforcemen­t agency in the county, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, states that armed, off-duty deputies “shall not consume any intoxicati­ng substance to the point where the employee is unable to or does not exercise reasonable care and/or control of the firearm.”

Under the sheriff ’s policy, deputies with a blood-alcohol content of 0.08% or more are unable to “exercise reasonable care,” but deputies above that limit can rebut claims they violated the policy by trying to demonstrat­e they acted reasonably.

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