Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jun 2000 Source: Los Angeles Times Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times Contact: 213-237-4712 Address: Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053 Website: http://www.latimes.com/ Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/ Author: Leslie Parrilla CURBING CORRUPTION IN CULVER CITY Police department seeks to promote decades-old plan in wake of Rampart scandal. CULVER CITY--Critical eyes from local residents have prompted one local police department to offer community meetings of reassurance in the wake of the LAPD's Rampart scandal. "It's a sad trend," said Culver City Police Department Lt. Tom Gabor. "I reassure them that there's no possibility that [corruption] is systemically happening in Culver City." The Culver City Police Department held a discussion Tuesday about its 24-year-old "rotation" system designed to obstruct corruption. "I think anybody in the greater Los Angeles area has some concerns and has got to think about it," said Chip Netzel, president of the Culver City Sunkist Park Neighborhood Watch. "You can't stick your head in the sand and say the possibility is not there." Because stagnation breeds corruption, said Gabor, Culver City's police department is the only department in the Westside that rotates the majority of its officers. Narcotics detectives move on after 18 months, transferring into the burglary or robbery units, just as vice detectives and officers in the gang unit, or crime impact team, venture back into street patrol or as motorcycle officers. "There's an elitism that forms when you have permanent units. Cliquism forms. And if there's someone who has a wayward mind, it's easy to select people you want to trust to do certain things," said Gabor. "People also get a little bored on assignment and the smaller crimes go to the wayside." The Los Angeles Police Department recently instituted the rotational system for its new gang unit that replaced the beleaguered CRASH gang unit, limiting officers to three years in the unit. "That's why we changed the CRASH units because there was a concern these guys developed too close of a connection to the gang members and too much of a length of time in one area can breed certain types of corruption," said LAPD Sgt. John Pasquariello. "It could have caused Rampart and we realize there is potential for that so we changed the policy." The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department is also considering the rotational system for some of its units.But disadvantages of a rotational system include a loss of expertise when relocating officers, according to Pasquariello. And although rounding out an officer and sending officers through training for each unit works for Culver City, it doesn't benefit a department the size and scope of LAPD. "We're a much bigger organization. There's not such a necessity to round out an officer in a department like ours because you're getting that within the department this size," Pasquariello said. - ---