Cleveland Police Poorly Trained, Says DOJ 

The U.S. Justice Department and Cleveland reached an agreement Thursday to overhaul the city’s police department after federal investigators concluded that officers use excessive and unnecessary force far too often and have endangered the public and their fellow officers with their recklessness.
Cleveland Police Poorly Trained, Says DOJ 
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder holds a roundtable meeting with law enforcement, local officials, and community leaders in Cleveland on Thursday. AP Photo/Tony Dejak
Updated:

CLEVELAND—The U.S. Justice Department and Cleveland reached an agreement Thursday to overhaul the city’s police department after federal investigators concluded that officers use excessive and unnecessary force far too often and have endangered the public and their fellow officers with their recklessness.

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson and the department signed an agreement that said both sides will work toward the appointment of a court-appointed monitor to oversee reform.

“We understand the progress we seek will not come over night,” Attorney General Eric Holder said in announcing the findings.

The department found a systemic pattern of reckless and inappropriate use of force by officers and concerns about search-and-seizure practices. It also said officers frequently violated people’s civil rights because of faulty tactics, inadequate training, and a lack of supervision and accountability.

Officers’ excessive use of force has created deep mistrust in Cleveland, especially in the black community, the report concluded.

“We saw too many incidents in which officers accidentally shot someone either because they fired their guns accidentally or because they shot the wrong person,” the report said.

The federal investigation was prompted by several highly publicized police encounters, chiefly the deaths of two unarmed people who were fatally wounded when police officers fired 137 shots into their car at the end of a high-speed pursuit in November 2012. Jackson was among those who asked the department to conduct the inquiry.

The report comes amid inflamed tensions between police and residents in several cities where white officers have killed young black men, including in New York City and Ferguson, Mo. These events have raised urgent national questions about the sense of trust between police and communities, Holder said.

Last week, hundreds of people blocked a Cleveland freeway at rush hour to protest those killings and the fatal shooting of a black 12-year-old boy by a white officer outside a Cleveland recreation center.

Police said the officer thought the boy was holding a firearm, but he actually had an airsoft gun that shoots nonlethal plastic pellets.

The city and Justice Department will begin negotiating an agreement that will be submitted to a federal judge outlining the scope of reforms, to include the appointment of an independent monitor.

A joint statement signed by Jackson, Assistant U.S. Attorney General Vanita Gupta, and U.S. Attorney for Northern Ohio Steven Dettelbach said Jackson, the city safety director and police chief, “will always retain full authority” to run the police department.

The report notes that the Justice Department first looked at Cleveland officers’ use of deadly force in 2002 and that an agreement was reached two years later on how such policies would be changed. There was no court order or independent monitor assigned then.

The Justice Department began its investigation in March 2013 and reviewed nearly 600 use-of-force incidents—both lethal and not—that occurred between 2010 and 2013. The report notes that Cleveland police officials did not provide many of the documents sought by federal investigators.

Inadequate Training

The Justice Department found that officers are poorly trained on how to control people during arrests and that some officers don’t know how to safely handle firearms.

The report highlights one encounter in which a sergeant fired two shots at a man wearing only boxer shorts after he escaped from a home where he and others were being held against their will. The sergeant told police investigators he shot at the man because he had raised an arm and pointed his hand toward the officer.

“No other officers at the scene reported seeing (the man) point anything at the sergeant,” the report said.

The 58-page report is especially critical of how the Cleveland Police Department investigates when officers use force.

Mark Gillispie
Mark Gillispie
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