Pubdate: Sat, 26 Feb 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: Diane Carman - Denver Post Columnist Editor's Note: This column discusses issues related to the Ismael Mena shooting PLAN FOR POLICE FALLS SHORT The mayor's goal for reforming the Denver police is laudable. He says he wants to "create a culture of excellence ... that breeds respect among the citizens and among the police." But his plan for achieving it overlooks the reason that respect does not exist. There's no accountability. Without the guarantee that rogue cops with itchy trigger fingers and reputations for lying under oath will receive swift punishment, there will be no respect for the Denver Police Department. The Denver P.D.'s problem is far more than a minor public-relations misstep to be glossed over with a management change and a commitment to stop hiring cops who've snorted cocaine. It's part of a national epidemic of serious human-rights abuses in departments from New York and Los Angeles to New Orleans and even tiny Steubenville, Ohio (pop. 21,000). It's no coincidence that it follows two decades of tough-on-crime politics, President Clinton's program to put 100,000 more police officers on the streets, and a war on drugs that many believe can be more accurately described as a war on minorities. Police powers in this country are at an all-time high and so are incidents of abuse. A 2 1/2-year study of 14 big-city police departments in the U.S. by Human Rights Watch was scathing in its criticism, particularly concerning "official unwillingness to deal seriously with officers who commit abuses until high-profile cases expose longstanding negligence or tolerance of brutality." The report cited case after case of shootings, brutality and threats by police officers that were covered up by their brethren in blue. Complaints - even those suggesting serious corruption - were routinely swept aside by public officials. "Police or public officials greet each new report of brutality with denials or explain that the act was an aberration, while the administrative and criminal systems that should deter these abuses by holding officers accountable instead virtually guarantee them impunity," the report said. Sound familiar? Human Rights Watch acknowledged that, like all human beings, officers make mistakes. "Yet, precisely because police officers can make mistakes, or allow personal bias or emotion to enter into policing - and because they are allowed, as a last resort, to use potentially lethal force to subdue individuals they apprehend - police must be subjected to intense scrutiny." The report suggests that police departments where cases of police misconduct have been documented and little or no official response has materialized to address them are in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention against Torture. If Mayor Wellington Webb wants to restore respect for the police in the community, he's going to have to create a system of oversight that weeds out bad cops, disciplines those who thwart investigations into police misconduct, guarantees that crimes by police officers are prosecuted aggressively and restores public confidence in the integrity of the force. Until then, no one can rest easy. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson