Voters will decide whether to give LAPD chief the right to fire officers – Daily News

The Los Angeles City Council agreed on Tuesday, June 25, to place a measure on the November ballot that would change the police discipline process and expand the chief’s ability to fire officers for serious misconduct.

In an 11-to-2 vote, council members directed the City Attorney’s Office to place a measure on the November ballot that would make the proposed changes in the City Charter.

Council members Hugo Soto-Martinez and Eunisses Hernandez voted no, and council members Marqueece Harris-Dawson and Kevin de León were absent during the vote.

Currently, the chief of police can recommend that an officer be terminated, but ultimately the decision is left to the Board of Rights, a three-member panel that serves as a quasi-judicial body, hearing evidence related to charges of misconduct, determining guilt and deciding penalties.

The new proposal would allow the chief to fire officers outright for engaging in sexual misconduct, fraud, excessive force or abuse on duty, among other violations listed in SB 2, a state law that highlights ways officers can be de-certified.

Soto-Martinez and Councilman Tim McOsker teamed up last year to help formulate the proposal, but they ultimately disagreed on Tuesday’s vote, with Soto-Martinez raising concerns about limiting those offenses to what is described under the law.

“I don’t think that it gets us to what we had originally wanted for there to be — the ability to terminate police officers when they engage in misconduct,” Soto-Martinez said. “But I think the voters will have the ultimate word, and we’ll see where the chips lay in November.”

McOsker, who voted in support, said, “Based on those facts, what this language does is it gives us greater clarity, not less clarity, because now we know the list of things, the types of things that the chief can do, and they’re very expansive to immediately or directly fire.

“It’s very clear that if the chief so chooses they can send somebody to Board of Rights with a recommendation of termination, if it’s less than those. We’re adding to the chief’s power and not detracting from it.”

Additionally, the proposal would change the composition of the LAPD’s Board of Rights from two sworn officers and one civilian member to one sworn officer and two civilian members. And it would repeal an option that gives officers facing disciplinary action the right to request an all-civilian Board of Rights panel.

Again, Soto-Martinez criticized that aspect of the proposal because he worries it would create a “two-tier system,” where some officers may be fired but many officers who engage in serious misconduct will keep their jobs. According to the councilman, the Board of Rights process has proven to be an “absolute disaster” over the years.

The councilman requested that the proposal be sent back to committee to address his concerns, but his motion to do so did not garner enough support.

The Board of Rights was enacted by voters after the 1992 riots.

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