Feds: Vegas police better at tracking use of force


The head of a federal law enforcement oversight group credited Las Vegas police Wednesday with upgrading training, keeping better track of how and when officers use deadly force, and instituting a pilot program to put cameras on the uniforms of some officers.
The acting head of the U.S. Justice Department's Community Oriented Policing Services told reporters that the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department has addressed or completed all but nine of 80 reforms called for in a report the agency made public 10 months ago.
"We're talking significant progress in a matter of months," COPS Acting Director Joshua Ederheimer said at a news conference with U.S. Attorney Daniel Bogden and Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie.
Ederheimer noted that other police departments take years or decades to implement reforms, and said the collaborative COPS review appeared to be having an effect in Las Vegas.
"The number of officer involved shootings is gradually declining," he said.
After peaking at 25 shootings in 2010, Las Vegas police were involved in 17 officer-involved shootings in 2011, 11 in 2012 and 10 so far this year, the report said. Four people died in police shootings in 2012, and two this year, department officials said.
Ederheimer, Bogden and Gillespie said some of the nine unresolved recommendations depended on action by other agencies, such as a proposal that the Clark County district attorney dedicate resources to more fully investigate officer-involved shootings.
Other recommendations, like a call for training and evaluating Las Vegas police officers on their ability to de-escalate tense confrontations, weren't assessed yet but would be made part of a final report due in February, Ederheimer said.
One, which would have police officers involved in on-duty shootings provide statements to criminal investigators, may never be implemented, the report said. It said police unions were directing Las Vegas officers involved in shootings not to cooperate with deadly force investigations.
The head of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association, Chris Collins, disputed that finding. He said officers routinely cooperate in several layers of post-shooting departmental and administrative reviews. But he said officers are advised not to provide statements in legal proceedings unless they are granted so-called Garrity protection from criminal prosecution _ meaning their words won't be used to self-incriminate them.
COPS was enlisted in January 2012 to study Las Vegas police use-of-force policies and practices aimed at cutting the number of officer-involved shootings, after a series of high-profile police shootings and a Las Vegas Review-Journal analysis that tallied 142 people killed by Las Vegas police in a little more than a decade. The newspaper investigation concluded that Las Vegas police were quicker to the trigger than officers in other similarly sized cities.
COPS officials on Wednesday termed the resulting review a "collaborative reform model."
Gillespie, the elected chief of a Las Vegas police force that includes about 3,200 sworn police and jail officers and 1,500 civilians, has announced he won't seek a third term as sheriff. But he promised the reforms would continue.
"Actions speak louder than words," Gillespie said. "We were, we are and we continue to be committed to these reforms."
Ederheimer noted that his agency planned to use the Las Vegas experience in similar police practices reviews of departments in Philadelphia and Spokane, Wash.