Diamondeye wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
DE you spoke of "significant reputation for corruption" the fact that the Rampart scandal is still in the public eye speaks
directly to that statement.
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This all stems from one incident, now 20 years old.
While Rodney King incident happened 20 years ago, the things I cited are ongoing. The issues I highlighted are the result of many actions taken by many, many officers. They are not one incident. The Rodney King deal (which I didn't even cite) is one thing; the LA Riots, the Rampart scandal, the findings of the Dept of Justice...are all additional "evidence" affecting the perception of the LAPD.
You cited the Christopher commission which was formed as a direct result of the Rodney King incident and the ensuing events, which is what caused me to think that was what you were talking about. The rest of what you're talking about isn't in the public eye, nationally, beyond very incidental mention.
Here's a four page listing of articles that CNN covered:
http://articles.cnn.com/keyword/rampart-scandalThat seems more than "very incidental".
Here's what Wiki has to say about Police Corruption:
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Accurate information about the prevalence of police corruption is hard to come by, since the corrupt activities tend to happen in secret and police organizations have little incentive to publish information about corruption.[5] Police officials and researchers alike have argued that in some countries, large-scale corruption involving the police not only exists but can even become institutionalized.[6] One study of corruption in the Los Angeles Police Department (focusing particularly on the Rampart scandal) proposed that certain forms of police corruption may be the norm, rather than the exception, in American policing.[7]
If the LAPD is specifically mentioned in wiki under the generic heading "Police Corruption", it might be more than just locally known or very incidental nationally.
Diamondeye wrote:
On the other hand, Rodney King is still an easily recognized cultural reference anywhere in this country. You're a California resident, and in California, these affairs may be very much more in the public eye, but as to a national reputation for corruption which is more what we're talking about here, I don't see that LAPD really has one.
My guess is that is the heart of the issue: You don't see it.
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Indictments in the CRASH corruption scandal were still being handed down in the early 2000's.
The oversight by the U.S. Department of Justice began in 2000.
In 2003 a commission was convened by the L.A. Police Commission and the LA Police Chief to probe the after-effects of the whole Rampart deal. The report was released in 2006.
The most recent Mayoral election was directly influenced by the Rampart scandal.
Multiple officers settled civil rights cases against LA in 2009.
Lawsuits are still being filed.
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I will acknowledge that corruption in the LAPD may be worse than I initially imagined since I do n't live in California. However, a cursory investigation of these makes it appear that there was a large degree of sensationalism as well. For example the Rampart scandal apparently initially implicated 70 officers, but only produced sufficient evidence for criminal charges against 24, and internal discipline charges against 58.
Yet, you cite USA Today showing something like eight cases, with maybe half a dozen convictions, in NO? The Rampart corruption caused over 100 cases to be thrown out because of police corruption.
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It's also alarming that a TV series and video games seem to be based on this and while that speaks to the severity of the incident, it also makes me wonder to what degree the reputation LAPD may have is a result of The Shield or GTA rather than the incidents.
Not to mention multiple movies. Once again, goes to perception.
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What incidents have been cited for Chicago and NO? What incidents in Chicago or NO are more recent than the National Lawyers Guild filing a class action suit against the LAPD for civil rights violations a couple of weeks ago?
Nonetheless, we have:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2010-04-13-new-orleans-cops_N.htmAs I said that article only speaks to about eight incidences and 3 convictions.
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Really, moonlighting trumps what I've cited for LA as far as public perception of corruption?
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and of course Danziger Bridge and other incidents in the aftermath of Katrina
Covered in the USA Today Article
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So, four officers versus dozens in LA Rampart.
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as well as the Ryan Harris incident, Jon Burge, and the Russ/Haggerty shootings, just to name a few.
A false arrest, and stuff from 20-40 years ago? I don't get it DE, the stuff you're presenting pale in comparison to what I've shown you (with the exception of the Brissette Madison), or are "timed out" using your initial argument. I wasn't even living in CA when the Rampart news broke, and I don't live there now. If it's all over the media, news and even video games, I think the public probably perceives (rightly or wrongly) that there's significant corruption there. I think it probably just comes down to
you not perceiving it DE.
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