Pubdate: Wed, 16 Feb 2000 Source: Daily News of Los Angeles (CA) Copyright: 2000 Daily News of Los Angeles Address: P.O. Box 4200, Woodland Hills, CA 91365 Fax: (818)713-3723 Feedback: http://www.DailyNews.com/contact/letters.asp Website: http://www.DailyNews.com/ Author: Rick Orlov Bookmark: MAP's shortcut to Rampart items: http://www.mapinc.org/rampart.htm. CITY BACKS POLICE COMMISSION RAMPART PROBE Six months after the Rampart Division scandal erupted, Los Angeles officials stood together for the first time Tuesday and supported the LAPD investigation and Police Commission review process in the face of calls for independent probes of the LAPD. "What you are seeing is a landmark event in the history of Los Angeles," Mayor Richard Riordan said at a news conference after appearing before the City Council with Police Chief Bernard C. Parks and Police Commission President Gerald Chaleff. "We are standing together to support the Christopher Commission reforms and an independent civilian investigation by our Police Commission." As Riordan was making his rare appearance before the council, the chorus of demands for appointment of an independent blue-ribbon commission to investigate the Rampart scandal was reaching a crescendo. But the council, on a 15-0 vote, chose to heed the call and agreed to provide the Police Commission with whatever resources it needs -- estimated at somewhere in the range of $1 million -- to hire staffers to analyze the Los Angeles Police Department's Board of Inquiry report, due within two weeks. Ferraro and other council leaders then joined Riordan, Parks and Chaleff at the news conference in an unusual show of unity. It was an extraordinary day of official Los Angeles moving from the Police Commission to the City Council to contain the investigation prompted by statements from former Officer Rafael Perez that he and members of the anti-gang Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums unit beat and shot suspected gang members, planted evidence on them and testified falsely to get them convicted. Among the developments: Parks said he will release his several-hundred-page Board of Inquiry report to the Police Commission by March 1. He said it contains more than 100 recommendations for reform. Parks said criminal investigators are prepared to move beyond the testimony of Perez and look at other officers who might be involved in misconduct. Councilman Joel Wachs called for an independent panel of jurists, civil and religious leaders to examine what happened at the Rampart Division and what can be done to avert future problems. Councilwoman Laura Chick called for a review of the LAPD's Internal Affairs group to explore whether a more independent unit is needed to ferret out corrupt cops or unjustified shootings. State Sen. Tom Hayden, D-Los Angeles, said he is looking at filing a federal civil rights lawsuit against the LAPD to control the anti-gang CRASH units, as well as asking for federal and state investigators to oversee whatever findings come from the LAPD. He also joined a call by the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California to have an independent panel review the Board of Inquiry report. Riordan spoke out strongly in favor of keeping the investigation in the hands of the Police Commission as the first test of the Christopher Commission reforms adopted after the March 1991 police beating of African-American motorist Rodney King. "We have a system in place for civilian oversight and we should use that," Riordan told the City Council. The mayor also complained about the slow pace at which the District Attorney's Office is moving on information provided by the LAPD on potential criminal filings. "Sometimes you seek perfection and it's not there," Riordan said. "The seeking of perfection can sometimes delay things until they never get done." The Board of Inquiry Report, originally scheduled to be released in November or December, took a look at the entire Police Department's operating structure and into how failures could occur, leading to what allegedly happened in the Rampart Division. It is separate from the criminal investigation. "If there is blame, it goes from the newest officer on the street up to the chief of police," Parks said. "There is enough blame to go around for all of us in the Police Department. Our systems fell apart and we are all facing responsibility for this issue. "None of us likes this. None of us likes waking up and reading what we're reading. I've been in this department 35 years and I will not let Rafael Perez be the symbol of the LAPD." The meeting also gave City Council members an opportunity to vent their frustration over the scandal, the length of time the inquiry has taken and what it has done to the image of the city. "This is an outrage and an insult to the people of this city," Councilwoman Ruth Galanter said. "It's like someone has stuck a thumb in the eye of the city." Councilwoman Rita Walters said it appeared to be "a serial eruption of crises" involving the LAPD. Councilman Mike Hernandez said he was concerned the council and the city were losing sight of the real problems in the city. "In my district of Westlake-Pico Union, people there are more concerned about reducing crime," Hernandez said. "Yes, there is concern over this, but there is concern over crime rates." Riordan noted it was the department itself that caught Perez for stealing drugs from a police evidence locker and eventually got him to talk in exchange for leniency. Parks said he believes the report by the Board of Inquiry, conducted by command officers, and the subsequent review by the Police Commission will end up restoring public confidence in the LAPD. "But in the end, public confidence will be restored by how we do our job every day," Parks said. Wachs, a candidate for mayor, said he believes public confidence will be restored only with an independent review. "The Rampart scandal may well be the most serious man-made disaster our city has ever faced," Wachs said. "Think about the horrors. People killed, framed, imprisoned and beaten by the very people we've entrusted to protect us from such criminal behavior. The Rampart scandal has scarred the city and tarnished the reputations of an internationally renowned department." Wachs wants all aspects of the scandal examined, including how such a disregard for the law and the truth could develop, whether there is a culture within the LAPD to cover up such incidents, and whether the District Attorney's Office and City Attorney's Office failed to act properly. Even though the proposal will not be formally discussed until next week, Councilman Mike Feuer said he would oppose such a plan. "We should let our system work," Feuer said. "Doing this would be a diminution of the Police Commission and its authority." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake