Time to clean up culture of corruption in the SFPD

The San Francisco Police Department and the city’s Public Defender Jeff Adachi have been lampooning each other in the media lately, and it seems like the cops feel they are the true victims in this tale of corruption.

By Joe FitzgeraldThe Guardsman

The  San Francisco Police Department and the city’s Public Defender Jeff  Adachi have been lampooning each other in the media lately, and it seems  like the cops feel they are the true victims in this tale of  corruption.

Instead  of responding so defensively to every legitimate accusation, SFPD brass  need to use this opportunity to clean up the department’s image, which  now stands battered and untrusted. Adachi can help.

Like  a man with a voodoo doll, Adachi has been needling our boys in blue at  every pressure point — misuse of evidence in crime labs, withholding  officer’s criminal backgrounds from defense attorneys, the size of  officer pensions, and the more recent debacle at the Henry Hotel, where  police were caught on video searching suspects’ residences without  warrants.

Adachi vs. the SFPD
Adachi’s  role as public defender is to ensure even those on the lowest rung of  society’s ladder get their fair due, and the cops role is to push for as  much leeway as they can in order to enforce public safety. It can make  cops seem totalitarian, which makes it easy to paint them as the bad  guys. This is clearly not the case.

But  the police have responded like the allegations of perjury are personal  attacks on their saintliness, seemingly forgetting their actions have  profound consequences on the lives of the people they serve.

Acting  Police Chief Jeff Godown responded defensively in a recent news  conference, laughably asking reporters to imagine how difficult it would  be to write down every detail of an incident report relating to a  crime.

He  offered up small “fixes” to the allegations, saying the SFPD would  conduct an audit of the plainclothes operations, “and will review  policies and procedures, and see if there’s anything that has to be  changed.”

A canned response if ever there was, and inadequate for dealing with systemic problems that have been prevailing for years.

A history of corruption
Adachi  said none of what we’re seeing is an isolated incident, but “teams or  units... that appear to be engaged in committing acts of perjury almost  nonchalantly.”

That’s  not to say the cops should be criminalized or their achievements in the  city discounted. According to their own statistics, even though there  were more homicides this year to date compared to last year (17 versus  12), total violent crime in San Francisco is down 13 percent versus the  same time last year, and overall homicides have dropped significantly  since 2008.

Improvements in the city as a whole don’t matter so much when seen through the lens of one individual, though.

“I  remember I had one case where I flat out proved the officer was lying —  no question,” Adachi said. “The judge was upset at me, and sentenced my  client – almost as if to challenge a police officer’s version was  sacrosanct.”

If  cops don’t have repercussions for lying in the highest levels of our  justice system, what incentive do they have to get the job done without  taking shortcuts? It’s not even a question of cop ethics at that point,  but human nature.

How we got here
It’s human nature to take the advantages you can, but when the cops do it, innocents suffer.

Cops  can get hardened to the job, and as Godown described, the reports all  tend to blur after a while. It’s important then that the cops take on  tactics that help them maintain relationships with the people they  serve.

Newly  minted District Attorney George Gascón, also former police chief,  introduced the CompStat system to the SFPD under his watch as chief. The  CompStat system is very complex, but at its heart provides detailed  statistics on where and when crimes happen in the city. This leads cops  to have goals that revolve around numbers alone, pulling uniformed  officers off of the streets and chasing down percentages and number  crunching people’s lives.

Community policing is the real solution
Beat  cops would be more likely to uphold the rights of citizens they  encounter if they were out there everyday getting to know those  citizens, building relationships with informants and preventing crime as  opposed to simply responding to new numbers.
The next step

Gascón brought in the FBI to investigate the unit that discarded the constitution under his watch.
It’s a step in the right direction, but it doesn’t go far enough.

The  SFPD are no villains, but should concede they cannot trust officers on  their word alone to avoid taking shortcuts in difficult cases. Godown  and Gascón should use the FBI investigation to objectively clean house  from top to bottom, instating clear policies that reinforce the  department’s stated commitment to honesty and justice.

Email:
jfitzgerald@theguardsman.com