At least six former officers have requested a reopening of their termination cases since the Los Angeles Police Department started investigating allegations by a former officer who left a trail of violence to avenge his firing.
Police Chief Charlie Beck reopened the case of Christopher Dorner and ordered a review of the LAPD disciplinary system after Dorner released a manifesto accusing the department of unjustly firing him. He also vowed to wage warfare on its officers and their families.
Police Protective League President Tyler Izen said he will ask the chief to review the new requests. He called the decision in Dorner’s case unprecedented and said it “has left many of our members in absolute limbo.”
“Because, if the department does investigations and they’re satisfied with those investigations, then what do they hope to learn from this review?” Izen said. “And if they are not satisfied with those investigations, why are they doing them without being satisfied in the first place?”
The department has conducted “biopsies” on cases in the past, but the officers involved were usually unaware of the action, he said.
Such internal decisions are often made to provide training or learning opportunities, Izen added.
In the Dorner case, Beck has said the review is being conducted to ensure public confidence in the department.
At Tuesday’s Police Commission meeting, Beck said he expects that review to be completed in several months. The department has also started a series of internal audits and held meetings to look at the overall disciplinary system, Beck said.
“We’re doing additional work within the department to discuss what the perception of fairness is for the discipline system,” Beck said.
That process will look at perceptions of fairness when dealing with race, gender and rank, and will involve input from officers, Beck said.’
He said many requests for reviews from former officers involve files that are old, but the department will look nonetheless.
“If people bring forward issues relative to their boards of rights or their firing that appear to have substance, I’ll have somebody look at them, do a biopsy, and make sure they were done the way that they should have been done,” Beck said.
Some people in the department have said the reopening of the Dorner case is a no-win situation.
The results will ultimately be reported to the Police Commission, the department’s civilian oversight board.
Commission President Andrea Sheridan Ordin acknowledged the difficulty involved in reopening the Dorner case but said the review is necessary.
“There will be people who said we shouldn’t have said anything at all; then you have a group of people say they don’t talk to us, they don’t care about us, and we have legitimate concerns, and no one’s answering them,” Ordin said.
“I’m not saying there’s any single right answer, but we just have to believe that more information, accurate information, well-thought-through information and recommendations are better than ignoring it,” she added.
Ordin, a longtime attorney, was a member of the Christopher Commission, which examined the LAPD after the beating of Rodney King.
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