Sunday, April 09, 2023

L.A. UNDER COVER COPS SUE LAPD OVER RELEASE OF PHOTOS

By Bob Walsh


                                 


Last week more than 300 undercover Los Angeles PD officers filed clains against both the city and the department after their names and photographs were released to a technology watchdog (?) group that posted the information online.

The group STOP LAPD SPYING COALITION posted more than 9,300 officers names and photos last month in a searchable database following a public records request by a reporter working for an outfit called KNOCK LA HUNDREDS which bills itself as a progressive news outlet.  

The officers were given no notice of the release.  The department's Inspector General is investigating Chief Michael Moore and Liz Rhodes, who is the department's Constitutional Policing Director, whatever the hell that is.  Also the officer's union has filed a misconduct complaint with the department.

The city attorney is working to determine if the department was even legally required to turn over the info, including the officer's photo, name, rank, ethnicity, date of hire, badge number and division of assignment.  Under California law this information can (and often is) withheld for officer safety or to protect the integrity of investigations.  

The STOP LAPD SPYING COALITION is generally opposed to all police intelligence operations, and is asserting the info should be used for countersurveillance of police officers.

The claims, which are a necessary precursor to a lawsuit, allege negligence by the department and ask unspecified damages.

1 comment:

Trey said...

Time to find a new job.