Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jul 2000 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2000 The Denver Post Contact: 1560 Broadway, Denver, CO 80202 Fax: (303) 820.1502 Website: http://www.denverpost.com/ Forum: http://www.denverpost.com/voice/voice.htm Author: Kevin Simpson and Marilyn Robinson RIDE-ALONGS DUE FOR OVERHAUL Robbyn Burger imagined the character in her developing comic screenplay as a female cop, and to lend the part authenticity she did what any good writer would do - research. On a ride-along with a female Denver police sergeant, Burger watched scene after depressing scene of domestic violence. She heard the complaint of a street woman who'd spent good money for a vial of crack cocaine, only to find it was ground-up peppermint candy. By shift's end, Burger had all the gritty detail she needed. "I changed the main character's occupation after that," she says with a chuckle. "I thought it would be lot funnier if she was a dentist." Burger, like thousands of citizens over the years, came away from the Denver police ride-along program with a new appreciation for police work. That's how ride-alongs are supposed to operate. But loose oversight of the program in Denver has opened it to criticism. Particularly damaging was last week's revelation that Colorado Rockies second baseman Mike Lansing rode with a SWAT team during a botched and fatal "noknock" drug raid last September - and his presence was concealed from investigators for 10 months. Then came an admission from Denver police that other celebrity ballplayers - and other ride-along participants, including members of the media - have shadowed officers without the required paperwork. Denver has tightened its policy on ridealongs, yet it still lags behind some other cities. San Diego police, for example, are governed by a four-page list of procedures. "It's probably the best tool we have to educate first-hand on what the officers experience," says San Diego department spokesman Bill Robinson. San Diego has a waiting list for riders, who must either live or work in the neighborhood they want to patrol. The program has remained popular despite a 1985 incident in which a gun battle left one police officer dead and wounded a second officer and the ride-along observer. Author (and ex-cop) Joseph Wambaugh has ridden often with San Diego police. And actor Dustin Hoffman, stopped by an officer while walking downtown looking grubby and unshaven, was so impressed by the officer's courtesy that he rode along on a patrol, Robinson says. TV personality Geraldo Rivera spent time in San Diego taping a show on narcotics raids, and wanted to go through the door with officers as they served a warrant on a suspect, Robinson recalls. Not happening, police said. "We don't take them out with SWAT," Robinson says. Departments in Dallas, Houston, Texas, and Seattle also prohibit SWAT ride-alongs. "Never," says John Leggio of Houston police." "Not on a "no-knock' raid," adds Seattle police spokesman Clem Benton. "That person is going to get in the way." Just outside Denver, the undercover North Metro Drug Task Force sometimes takes riders. Sgt. Jim Gerhardt estimates the task force has about 20 a year, mostly officers and detectives from member agencies but occasionally a civilian police employee, victim advocate, family member or friend. In Arvada, deputy police chief Ted Mink says his department averages 30 ride-alongs a month from the citizen police academy, prospective job applicants and police chaplains. Mink accepts that some officers find ride-along duty annoying. "Most of them feel it's their "office,' and they don't like anyone invading their space," Mink says. "But it's something they have to do. We think it's very valuable to have people . . . get a firsthand view of police practices and policies." Denver patrol Sgt. David Dawkins enjoys the interaction with citizens. "I think for me it was fun just to let people know what they see in the movies is much different than what happens on a daily basis," Dawkins says. "It's not 24-7 excitement all the time. There are other things police do during the day, and some of it's just picking up paperwork downtown, getting the car fixed." Many departments target ridership for individuals or groups that may ultimately be of benefit to law enforcement. Houston, for example, offers ride-alongs to grand jury members. "So people making decisions as far as criminal acts have some awareness of seeing an evening in Houston through the eyes of a police officer," Leggio said. "Riding along with police is not an amusement park ride. We're not a ride at AstroWorld." In Denver, policies have come and gone, and at turns have been enforced and ignored. Retired officer Steve Metros, a former district commander, recalls that Denver started screening participants in the early 1980s, and also adopted a once-a-year guideline to deter gratuitous repeat visits. "But that wasn't followed closely," he says. "The captain and even the division chief could make exceptions. Relatives would ride, or someone in the community, a banker or a businessman. "Then it got carried away, and certain people would bring their squeeze along." Metros says traffic offenders with an ax to grind would try to ride along frequently to see how officers wrote tickets. "Lot lizards" - another name for cop groupies - would use the program to get a little closer to the uniform. At that point, Metros recalls, policy was tightened to require captains' approval for ride-alongs. The department also began running background checks. "It went relatively well," Metros says. "Then, like anything else, the rules weren't followed that closely as time went by." Policies for ride-alongs have proved flexible to a fault over the years, and that may be why longterm gains in public goodwill have been suddenly countered by the current criticism of lax oversight. "I think we could monitor it a little better, make sure it's approved up and down the chain," says Dawkins. "But I'd hate to see them get rid of it." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek