Pubdate: Fri, 03 Mar 2000 Source: Contra Costa Times (CA) Copyright: 2000 Contra Costa Newspapers Inc. Address: 2640 Shadelands Drive, Walnut Creek, CA 94598 Feedback: http://www.hotcoco.com/site/letters.htm Website: http://www.hotcoco.com/index.htm Forum: http://www.hotcoco.com/cocotalk/index.htm Author: Cynthia L. Webb, Associated Press LAPD SCANDAL LEAVES OFFICIALS, POLITICIANS POINTING FINGERS One Government Expert Sees Greater Than Usual 'Irresponsibility' By Leaders As They Jockey For Position And Seek To Please Voters LOS ANGELES - One of the worst scandals in Los Angeles history has done more than ruin the reputation of the Police Department -- it has left city officials, county prosecutors and the police chief jockeying for political and public approval. Unraveling revelations of brutal misconduct, police abuse and lax supervision of cops could be a difficult task not only because of the magnitude of the allegations of wrongdoing in the Los Angeles Police Department, but also for the infighting that is taking place. Police Chief Bernard Parks is battling with District Attorney Gil Garcetti, whom he has accused of taking too long investigating cases that could result in criminal prosecution. The head prosecutor has said he won't be rushed. Meanwhile, Mayor Richard Riordan has been criticized by a group of City Council members who claim he is keeping them from being informed about the investigation. One political expert says it has as much to do with personalities as it does with political ambitions. "Politicians often blame each other and try to escape responsibility in that way, but I think what we are seeing now is truly greater irresponsibility on the part of our elected officials," said Erwin Chemerinsky, a University of Southern California law professor. The city's police union, the Los Angeles Police Protective League, has asked him to critique the LAPD's internal inquiry. "All of the finger pointing between the D.A. and the police chief is not helping to solve anything," Chemerinsky said Thursday. Nor will the antics that were displayed Wednesday. Five City Council members accused the mayor of shutting them out of an impromptu press conference on the Police Department's Board of Inquiry report. They knocked repeatedly on the door and finally got in after the briefing was over. A spokeswoman for the mayor said the room was already full. The report found that faulty supervision of officers at the Rampart station near downtown, as well as police personnel turning a blind eye to wrongdoing, led to the scandal in which Rampart officers beat, shot and robbed innocent people. "For the mayor to lock out City Council members from a press conference so that they have to bang on the door to get in - that's just childish," Chemerinsky said. Finger pointing surfaced earlier that same day when Parks was asked about Garcetti's suggestion that the Rampart scandal was Parks' mess - one the head prosecutor is just helping to clean up. The chief said he "issued a challenge to every member of the criminal justice system to do the same thing we did" and investigate their departments. He also said he wants to push Garcetti, who is up for re-election, "to act quicker" in prosecuting cases. Victoria Pipkin, a spokeswoman for the District Attorney's Office, said she would not respond directly to Parks' remarks about other departments looking for possible misdeeds. "Suffice it to say, the entire criminal justice system has been impacted by the scandal," Pipkin said. Garcetti has said he won't compromise his ability to successfully prosecute those in the scandal by rushing a weak case to court. But he has pledged to file charges in connection with the case in 90 days, Pipkin said. "We're moving as expeditiously as possible, but these cases do take time," she said. Fifteen damage suits have been filed as a result of the scandal, and officials have estimated liability could cost taxpayers more than $100 million. Forty tainted convictions have been overturned and 20 officers have been relieved of duty, while investigators continue to review scores more cases to see if other people were framed. According to Chemerinsky, officials are going to have to get along to continue to produce tangible results. "What I think we are seeing now is hostility and personality conflicts and distrust that has built up over a long period ... playing itself out," he said. "I think it does have a real danger of obstructing the investigations and even the handling of the lawsuits." Riordan's senior deputy press secretary, Jessica Copen, said the mayor has been supportive of both Garcetti and Parks. And the mayor and the council did come together on a vote supporting the Police Commission. "Everyone is working together. They are," Copen said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D