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Monday, August 9, 2010

Council Gives Instructions to New Police Chief

Posted by on Mon, Aug 9, 2010 at 4:04 PM

The Seattle City Council appointed John Diaz as Seattle's next police chief, an expected move, in a unanimous vote this afternoon. Along with their blessing, council president Richard Conlin and council public-safety chair Tim Burgess issued a four-point letter (.pdf) outlining a list of tasks for the new chief.

Cut Crime: Conlin and Burgess want Diaz to reduce crime, of course, particularly in the areas of domestic violence, robbery, theft, aggravated assault, and burglary. They also remain committed to the idea that officers need to crack down on uncivil behavior on the streets. "We expect you to formulate initiatives that will lead to reductions in street disorder," they write, "particularly problems related to open-air drug markets that plague some Seattle neighborhoods."

De-Escalate Tense Situations: Apparently responding to the high-profile case of a police officer who punched a hysterical jaywalker, the council members ask Diaz to "implement the most effective training available for minimizing and de-escalating conflict in encounters between officers and civilians."

Discipline for Misconduct: This request clearly results from the infamous "Mexican piss" case. Conlin and Burgess call for a high standard for investigating and reprimanding officers who are less than professional. "We encourage you to aggressively investigate and appropriately punish misconduct of a more serious nature."

Improve Crime Reporting: The council members applaud the new neighborhood crime map but they say it's not enough. They want improvements to the "quality and timeliness of crime information." They also say Diaz should assess other cities' crime reporting systems and charter a plan to improve Seattle's system.

On the whole, these look like earnest, boilerplate expectations for any new chief, combined with requisite caveats about dealing with two lightning-rod cases that boiled over while Diaz was the interim chief. But two things stand out.

First, the call for increasing the quality of crime reporting is excellent. The current system, while more accessible to more people, can be needlessly time consuming (for instance, reports are posted online but many are empty, so you can spend lots of time opening and closing empty documents trying to find something useful). It's great to ask Diaz to compare Seattle to other cities; we should crib what's working well elsewhere.

However, I'm admittedly wary about calls to reduce street disorder and clamp down on drug markets. Street disorder is a deliberately vague term. It's not like calling to reduce crime on the street, stop fights on the streets, stop robberies on the street, or other activities documented as crimes. Street disorder has instead been Burgess and Conlin's catch-all term for people acting strangely, but who aren't breaking any existing law. Since it is hard to pinpoint, it's hard to gauge current levels of disorder, so it's hard to know if we've succeeded at reducing it. That said, I definitely support more foot patrols in areas where people feel unsafe to discourage crimes from happening and deal with them when they do crop up. As for open-air drug markets, to the extent that we can mitigate associated crime—e.g., deploy anti-car-prowl officers, increase neighborhood policing, support block watches, etc.—I'm all for it. But if that means more of the futile sweeps of drug-markets that have proven ineffective in the past, then that's not terribly helpful. Random sweeps of low-level crack addicts take enormous police resources and have only the briefest reduction on the availability of drugs or number of drug sellers in a neighborhood.

Chief Diaz is slated to be sworn in next Monday at City Hall.

 

Comments (15) RSS

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Will in Seattle 1
All this will be ignored during the negotiations between Council and the police at the bargaining table.

You can take THAT to the credit union and deposit it.
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on August 9, 2010 at 4:26 PM
danindowntown 2
Why don't you live downtown for a while and then see how you feel about the police working harder to reduce street distrubances? I have been a downtown Seattle resident for nearly 8 years and the police could do much more to dissuade open drug deals on 3rd Ave and gangs of loitering street kids from blocking sidewalks in Westlake.

Your skepticism is misplaced. Foot patrols and engagement would be a good start, at least you purport to support that.
Posted by danindowntown on August 9, 2010 at 4:27 PM
meanie 3
@2 or you could man up and ask the "loitering kids" on your lawn to move. I hate spineless complaints from people afraid to use their own rights.
Posted by meanie http://www.spicealley.net on August 9, 2010 at 4:37 PM
Joe Szilagyi 4
"Discipline for Misconduct"

Why doesn't the Council just pass a zero-tolerance rule for racial, ethnic, or sexual issues for city employees, punishable by, oh, termination, like is common in the private workforce?
Posted by Joe Szilagyi http://www.joeszilagyi.com on August 9, 2010 at 4:45 PM
prompt 5
Clearly, the Stranger is soft on crack.
Posted by prompt on August 9, 2010 at 4:49 PM
meanie 6
@4 cause the unions don't give a fuck what the council wants.
Posted by meanie http://www.spicealley.net on August 9, 2010 at 4:55 PM
Joe Szilagyi 7
@6 that's the sort of thing unions shouldn't be having any input in, to be honest: anti-discrimination policies. Those are meant to be zero-tolerance for a reason. It's one of the few instances it would be acceptable to fight a union down on. Do we really think the police would strike or put on a public battle over a policy that says you can't use racial epithets? Please.
Posted by Joe Szilagyi http://www.joeszilagyi.com on August 9, 2010 at 4:57 PM
meanie 8
@7 I agree totally, but look at schools, and any bit of history with the police unions. Its all theatre telling them how its going to be.
Posted by meanie http://www.spicealley.net on August 9, 2010 at 5:01 PM
Joe Szilagyi 9
@8 in my fanciful world you'd have a mayor and Council with the stones to say "No contracts without this bit added in, full stop." Actually, all you'd have to do is have the Council pass legislation to make it a legal requirement for ALL city contracts with vendors, agencies, anything--if any city tax payer monies will go to you, you MUST have a zero-tolerance policy of this sort in place. The unions would be stuck then if they'd like any contract, come renewal time.
Posted by Joe Szilagyi http://www.joeszilagyi.com on August 9, 2010 at 5:04 PM
danindowntown 10
@ 3 Huh? What rights are you referring to? It is the responsiblity of the police to keep order in the streets. It is my right as a citizen to lobby government to make the police more accountable, call the police when there are disturbances, and excercise my freedom to not directly express my irritation at groups of loitering street kids so as to reduce my chance of getting a beat down in the streets.

You make very little sense, even for a SLOG troll.
Posted by danindowntown on August 9, 2010 at 5:14 PM
Will in Seattle 11
@6 ftw.

Council is gutless and the police unions know it.
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on August 9, 2010 at 5:23 PM
Joe Szilagyi 12
And for those that say it can't be done:

http://www.oregon.gov/OSP/lend_resolutio…
Posted by Joe Szilagyi http://www.joeszilagyi.com on August 9, 2010 at 5:46 PM
Joe Szilagyi 13
Actually, nevermind. That looks rather toothless. I suppose unless the Council is willing to man up nothing will change.
Posted by Joe Szilagyi http://www.joeszilagyi.com on August 9, 2010 at 5:47 PM
Will in Seattle 14
This is Seattle ... when has that ever happened here, Joe?
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on August 9, 2010 at 11:37 PM
aardvark 15
Im with 10. (sorry dont hit me)

Anyway thanks Dominic, you and Eli are like the only ones doing the Real news around here. (but i like infotainment too. sorry don't hit me)

anyway aggressive street loiterers should have their balls cut off, like we try to do to all the stray kitties where i live. (if you hit me ill have your balls cut off. by someone else.)

and fuck yeah for de-escalation as a police culture. friendly sane policeman > pig
Posted by aardvark on August 10, 2010 at 10:56 AM

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