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"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

The national epidemic of mentally unstable cops #3



ACLU accuses Newark police of false arrests, excessive force
NEWARK — The American Civil Liberties Union will ask for a federal investigation of the Newark Police Department Thursday, saying it routinely violates residents' civil rights through excessive force and false arrests.
Citing dozens of lawsuits and years of internal affairs statistics, the ACLU says the department is incapable of policing itself. Its report says records show that out of 261 complaints in 2008 and 2009 involving excessive force, differential treatment or improper arrest, entry or search, only one was sustained. One officer has faced 62 internal affairs investigations in an almost 14-year career, according to a lawsuit, and his lawyer said none have been sustained.
Deborah Jacobs, executive director the ACLU in New Jersey, said the petition is the first step in a process she hopes will end with the same kind of consent decree and federal oversight imposed on the State Police a decade ago in response to the racial profiling scandal.
"This is a last resort," she said. "I don’t see how we can get things straight in this administration without external help, expertise and resources."
Top Newark officials said the ACLU petition was undermining progress in the city.
"The city of Newark was extremely disappointed when it reviewed the ACLU’s petition," said Julian Neals, the city’s top lawyer. "The city feels that the ACLU petition is frivolous and submitted in bad faith."
Neals said it’s disingenuous for the ACLU to focus on lawsuits that were submitted before the current administration took office. In addition, he emphasized that many of the settlements paid out by the city were only small amounts and included no admission of guilt.
Mayor Cory Booker was angered by the ACLU petition.
"It’s casting unnecessary aspersions on the police department through the distortion of facts."
He said the city had tried to cooperate with the agency on numerous issues but now feels the ACLU has unfairly shut down that relationship.
Booker said the ACLU is promoting "negative stereotypes" of Newark and not giving the city credit for its progress.
Federal oversight of local police departments is rare and used in response to a "pattern or practice" of violating people’s rights. In a 96-page petition being submitted to the U.S. Department of Justice, the ACLU says it has documented such a pattern in the state’s largest municipal police department of 1,300 officers.
"Qualitatively, it seems like Newark’s problems are far worse than in other cities where the Department of Justice has intervened," said Flavio Komuves, the ACLU lawyer who compiled the petition.
A U.S. Department of Justice spokeswoman declined to comment on the petition or whether an investigation will be conducted, but said it will be reviewed.
The state Attorney General’s Office said it has not seen the ACLU petition.
"We are always concerned where there are allegations of police misconduct," spokesman Peter Aseltine said. "But we’re not in a position where we can comment."
The petition, which says Newark police are "beset with serious systemic problems," follows a spike in homicides this summer. It also comes months before the department, in the wake of a city budget crisis, could be forced to layoff 167 officers and demote an another 112.
City officials have maintained Newark police have made progress in some areas. Overall crime in the state’s largest city is down 21 percent from 2006.
Jacobs said she and Newark police have worked together on reform issues. But, she said, those efforts have fallen short and police have failed to improve in key areas.
"Consistently there’s been a will to try and make changes," she said. "But between crime and a lack of resources, things have consistently been back-burnered."
University of Nebraska-Omaha criminal justice professor Samuel Walker, a nationwide expert on police accountability who advised the ACLU on its petition, said federal intervention is sometimes necessary to advance reform.
"When you have a really dysfunctional department, federal intervention is a way of forcing a major overhaul," he said. "At some point, that begins to change the culture of the department into a culture of accountability."
Anthony Ambrose, chief of detectives at the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office and a former Newark police chief, said federal oversight is often resisted but can be beneficial.
"No law enforcement executive wants a consent decree or someone looking over your department," Ambrose said. "But it’s not a bad thing. It’s another avenue for reforms, if needed."
Derrick Hatcher, president of the Newark chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police, said an investigation is unecessary. "We know how to police our police," he said.
The ACLU cited lawsuits and civilian complaints as evidence of excessive force and improper arrests within the department.
"The individual cases don’t necessarily shock my conscience," Komuves, the ACLU lawyer, said. "What shocks my conscience is the sheer number of them."
Among the lawsuites cited by the ACLU, one claims a man was smashed in the face by a police officer, requiring doctors to wire his jaw shut. A lawyer for another man said his client still has trouble holding a pen in his writing hand after being tackled during an arrest. A third suit, filed in October 2009, said Jose Quinonez was assaulted by Officer Alan Knight, who has faced 62 previous internal investigations.
Knight’s lawyer, Ronald Ricci, said his client was on his way to work and stopped to chase down two suspects when Quinonez attacked him.
"He’s getting sued for trying to protect the residents of Newark," Ricci said.
None of the internal investigations of Knight has been sustained, Ricci said, adding it’s common for suspects to file complaints after being arrested in an attempt to get out of trouble.
"Most of them (complaints) are from people with multiple criminal records," he said. "There are always injuries consistent with resisting arrest. People are just looking for money."
Overall, $2.04 million has been paid out in settlements in the past 2 1/2 years to civilians who filed lawsuits against Newark police, according to the ACLU. Almost half the money went to the family of Rasheed Moore, who was shot and killed by two police officers during a motor vehicle stop that turned violent in 2005.
Another $2.69 million is being paid to officers who sued the department for allegations like harassment, discrimination and retaliation.
"They’re lumping things together to give the impression that Newark has lost all its money due to successful litigation. That is absolutely not true," Booker said of the ACLU. "(Jacobs is) making the implication that there’s a bigger problem than we have."
The ACLU petition names 11 officers who have faced criminal charges in the last 2 1/2 years. Nine remain with the department on administrative duty.
The ACLU also points to records saying police rarely sustain misconduct complaints against themselves, saying that’s evidence officers aren’t being held accountable.
A 2006 federal study of large police departments nationwide said 8 percent of excessive force complaints are sustained. But Newark police did not uphold a single excessive force complaint in 2009, 2008, or 2007, according to annual reports. In that time period, 195 such complaints were filed.
"You’re going to tell me 200 people made internal affairs complaints and the majority made it up? That doesn’t make sense," Jacobs said. "This attitude that people lie and make stuff up all the time, I find that disrespectful to the citizenry of Newark and I don’t think it reflects the reality."
Asked about the level of sustained complaints within the department, Police director Garry McCarthy said the figures proved nothing.
"So the cop always has to be wrong?" McCarthy said. "Drug dealers make allegations against police officers every day to stop them from doing their job."
Joseph Santiago, the current Irvington police director who previously led the Newark department, said the low number of sustained complaints would be "a cause for concern if I was the director" and may require further investigation.